Showing posts sorted by relevance for query Shiva. Sort by date Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by relevance for query Shiva. Sort by date Show all posts

Hinduism - Who Is Lord Shiva?

 


 

Shiva (auspicious) - One of the three most significant deities in the Hindu pantheon, together with the deity Vishnu and the Goddess.

All three are remarkable for being almost missing from the Vedas, and their ascent to power (and subsequent eclipse of the original Vedic gods) indicates a significant shift in Hindu tradition.

Shiva is the only one of the three who is not named in the Veda.

He is connected with the god Rudra, who initially appears in a few late Vedic hymns and is eventually described as the only ultimate deity underlying all things in the Shvetashvatara Upanishad.

In this upanishad, the term Shiva ("auspicious") first occurs as an adjective modifiying the feminine noun body.

Despite his presence in the upanishad as a supreme god, Rudra/status Shiva's is ambiguous.

He is characterized as a skilled archer who lives in the highlands (away from humans) and is commanded not to hurt either man or beast with his arrows.

Rudra/Shiva is undoubtedly not a Vedic god, and some have argued that his origins lay in the Indus Valley civilization, citing as proof one of the seals discovered at Harappa, an ancient city in Pakistan, depicting a horned figure sitting cross-legged as if in meditation.

This association is feasible, but it isn't really persuasive.

He may have joined the pantheon as a deity worshipped by ascetics, who have historically been connected with mountain settlements.

Shiva is associated with ascetics because of various ascetic characteristics ascribed to him, such as matted hair and an ash-smeared torso.

His marginal place among the gods might also be explained by his ascetic background, since he would have been a "outsider" to the Vedic sacrifice cult, which was the "established" religion at the time.

Shiva's dramatic entrance into the pantheon occurs during the account of his wife Sati's death.

In this myth, Shiva's father-in-law Daksha's disparaging remarks—that Shiva was an ascetic without money, work, or family who was unsuitable to enter respectable society—led to the destruction of Daksha's sacrifice as a demonstration of Shiva's power.

Shiva's iconography, mythology, and character have all kept this ambiguous, sometimes marginal nature.

The fact that he is a god whose nature enables him to pass transcend competing forces (or dualities) inside himself and the universe by being the potential of both forces at the same time is perhaps his most fundamental and significant attribute.

Shiva may symbolize both the wild and hazardous aspect of life as well as the polished and dignified side.

Atop the one hand, he had the look of a traditional ascetic, with matted hair, an ash-smeared physique, and a residence on Mount Kailas in the Himalayas.

He is, on the other side, Hindu society's ideal of a nice husband who adores his wife Parvati.

He has snakes on his body and is dressed in a bloody elephant hide, yet he also wears the Ganges River and the crescent moon, which are symbols of beauty, purity, and auspiciousness.

His mythic deeds emphasize his overwhelming power, which no foe can stand up to, as well as his sudden and sometimes impetuous temper, which is best seen in his destruction of Kama, the god of love; however, this sudden violence contrasts with his grace and favor toward his devotees (bhakta), for whom he is given the name "quickly satisfied" (Ashutosh), and to whom he will give almost everything.

He is historically portrayed as the expositor of the tantras, the most secret and secretive religious practice of all, yet being shown as simple and without deception (as Bholanath, the "simple lord").

This transcendence of all polarities may be observed in the representations that usually depict him, such as his form as Nataraja, which depicts several of his opposing attributes, or as Ardhanarishvara, which is half masculine and half female.

The linga, the pillar-shaped item that is his symbolic form, whose base and shaft are seen as signifying male and female reproductive organs, exemplifies this transcending of duality.

Finally, the tantric theory of the subtle body (the system of psychic centers, or chakras, that run throughout the human body), in which religious practice seeks for the union of Shiva and Shakti, exemplifies this transcendence.

Shiva encompasses all the conflicting possibilities for human experience, as Wendy Doniger O'Flaherty points out, and in legendary form gives a resolve that one ordinary human existence can never achieve.

In response to the earlier and more established concept of Vishnu's avatars, Shiva's adherents created a philosophy of avatars (incar tures of Shiva who come on earth in the guise of a variety of saints, sages, and lesser deities to restore balance and do other required deeds).

Shiva's avatars, unlike Vishnu's, do not seem to have been a mechanism to accommodate minor existing deities within the bigger pantheon.

The most significant of Shiva's twenty-one incarnations is Hanuman, who is the only one with a well-established separate cult.

The others were sages (such as Durvasas) and prominent creatures, but unlike Vishnu, the worship of Shiva's avatars has never overshadowed Shiva's own adoration.

See Wendy Doniger O'Flaherty's Shiva, 1981, and Stella Kramrisch's The Presence of Shiva, 1981, for further information on Shiva's mythology.

Also see Shaiva.


~Kiran Atma


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Sati

 


Hindu goddess, daughter of the demigod Daksha and wife of the god Shiva, whose death and dismemberment are pivotal incidents in the mythology of both Shiva and the Goddess.

According to legend, after Sati marries Shiva, her father Daksha feels that Shiva has not shown him proper respect and develops bad feelings toward him.

Inflated with pride, Daksha plans a great sacrifice to which he invites all the gods but deliberately excludes Shiva.

When Sati learns about the sacrifice, she insists that she wants to go, since it is in her natal home.

Shiva, after trying to dis courage her by pointing out that one should not go without an invitation, final ly gives her his permission.

When Sati arrives at the sacrificial grounds and asks Daksha why he has excluded her hus band, Daksha responds with a stream of abuse, excoriating Shiva as worthless and despicable.

Humiliated by these public insults, Sati commits suicide—in some versions, by leaping into the sacrificial fire, in others by withdrawing into yogic trance and giving up her life.

Shiva, furious at what has happened, creates the fierce deity Virabhadra (or in some versions, Virabhadra and the fierce goddess Bhadrakali), and dis patches them to destroy Daksha’s sacri fice.

They gleefully carry out his com mand, scattering the guests and killing Daksha.

The resulting carnage ends only when the assembled gods praise Shiva as the supreme deity.

Daksha is eventu ally restored to life with the head of a goat, and he too repents his arrogance and worships Shiva.

At Daksha’s plea, Shiva offers to stay at the sacrifice place forever and sanctify it.

Shiva assumes the form of a linga, the pillar-shaped item that is his symbolic form, and may still be seen in the Daksha Mahadev temple in the village of Kankhal.

Despite the fact that this adoration has calmed Shiva's rage, he arrives late at Sati's death and walks the land with her corpse on his shoulders.

Shiva neglects his divine tasks in his sorrow, and the universe starts to break apart.

Concerned about the world's impending annihilation, the gods seek assistance from Vishnu.

Following following Shiva, Vishnu uses his razor-sharp discus to gently sever portions of Sati's corpse until there is nothing left.

Shiva departs for the mountains after the body is completely gone, where he stays engrossed in meditation until it is shattered by Kama.

Sati reincarnates as the goddess Parvati and marries Shiva again.

The legend around Sati is significant for a number of reasons.

For starters, it serves as the founding story for the Shakti Pithas ("Goddess's Bench"), a network of Goddess-sanctuary locations that stretches throughout the subcontinent.

Each of these Shakti Pithas—there are 51 in some lists, 108 in others—marks the location where a piece of Sati's body fell to earth and took on the shape of a separate goddess.

These many goddesses, scattered over the subcontinent, are therefore considered as manifestations of the same primal goddess, linked by the human body's symbolism.

The myth contains three key lessons in addition to forming this network: It graphically illustrates the supremacy of devotion (in this case, to Shiva) over the older sacrificial cult; it illustrates some of the tensions in the joint family, in which women feel a conflict of loyalty between their natal and marital homes; and it is the founding myth for the Daksha Mahadev temple in Kankhal, just south of the sacred city of Haridwar, where Daksha's sacrifice is said to have occurred.

Hinduism - Who Is Goddess Parvati In The Hindu Pantheon?

 

 ("mountain's daughter") Parvati is the Hindu goddess Parvati, who is the wife of the god Shiva and the daughter of the minor deity Himalaya (the Himalaya Mountains personified) and his wife Mena.

Shiva has been lost in monastic seclusion since the loss of his first wife, Sati, and Parvati comes in human form to entice him to father the offspring required to defeat the demon Taraka.

Even as a kid, Parvati swears to have only Shiva as her spouse, according to her legends.

Shiva has made a vow of asceticism and is engrossed in profound meditation on Mount Kailas, so her parents attempt to dissuade her.

Parvati's initial attempt to stir Shiva's passion fails miserably.

Kama, the god of love, attempts to kill Shiva with a desire arrow, but Shiva shoots a torrent of fire from his third eye, burning Kama to ash.

Undaunted, Parvati enters the mountains and starts her own program of extreme physical asceticism (tapas): standing for long periods of time on one foot, suffering the heat of summer and the cold of winter, and practicing severe fasting (upavasa) and self-denial.

Shiva is ultimately awakened by the spiritual strength created by her austerity, and he appears to her dressed as an elderly brahmin.

He attempts to dissuade Parvati by making harsh statements about Shiva's lifestyle and behavior, but Parvati remains steadfast in her decision.

Shiva eventually exposes his actual self to her, and the two marry.

Shiva is the Hindu image for the perfect husband because of his love to his bride, yet their family life is uncommon.

The pair has no stable residence or means of support since Shiva is the metaphor for the ideal ascetic, and Parvati is sometimes shown as lamenting about being an ascetic's wife.

Their marriage, symbolically, marks the ascetic's domestication and entry into social and family life.

Their marriage exemplifies the cultural conflict that exists between the two most fundamental Hindu religious ideals: the householder and the renunciant ascetic.

Shiva and Parvati conceive offspring, but not in the traditional way: Skanda grows from Shiva's semen, which falls on the ground during their interrupted love-making, while Ganesh develops from the invigorated soil from Parvati's body.

Parvati, like other married Hindu deities, is seen as compassionate and gentle.

She may be spiteful in certain legendary myths, but on the whole she exudes a loving and motherly presence.

Her mythology is nearly completely linked to Shiva's, demonstrating her subjugation as the perfect wife, and her devotion is also frequently linked to him.

Parvati has a crucial role in tantra, a secret, ritual-based religious practice, since she is often shown as the one asking Shiva and later as the pupil receiving his instructions in tantric scriptures.

See David R. Kinsley's Hindu Deities, 1986, for further information about Parvati and all the Hindu goddesses.


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Hinduism - Who Is Vaidyanath In The Hindu Pantheon?

 



In his manifestation as the "Lord of Physicians," Shiva takes on a new form (vaidya).

In Deoghar, Bihar, he has a temple named after him.

The Vaidyanath linga is one of the twelve jyotirlingas, a network of sites deemed especially sacred to Shiva and at which Shiva is uniquely present.

Shiva is present at Vaidyanath in the form of a linga, the pillar-shaped image that is his symbolic form, and the Vaidyanath linga is one of the twelve jyotirlingas, a network of sites deemed especially sacred to Shiva and at which Shiva The demon-king Ravana is considered to be a great devotee (bhakta) of Shiva, according to Vaidyanath's founding story.

Ravana journeys to Mount Kailas, Shiva's abode, and practices severe austerity for years in the hopes of seeing Shiva.

When his austerity fails, the ten-headed Ravana proceeds to chop off each of his heads and present them to Shiva one by one.

As he is ready to sever the last of his heads, Shiva comes in front of him and bestows a blessing on Ravana.

Ravana requests that Shiva reside in his Lankan castle, a wish that would make Ravana unstoppable.

Shiva agrees to appear in the shape of a linga, but cautions Ravana that the linga will remain eternally wherever it touches the soil.

Ravana has the desire to urinate as he starts his journey back to Lanka (which in some versions is described as being caused by Shiva himself, because the other gods have begged Shiva not to go to Lanka).

He can't put the linga down because of the condition of his boon; also, since urine makes one ritually unclean, the linga would be polluted if he held it while answering nature's call (or touches it before he has taken a purifying bath).

Ravana eventually gives the linga to a cowherd and tells him to keep it off the ground.

The linga, however, is so heavy that the cowherd is forced to let it rest on the ground, where it adheres to the earth and remains to this day.

~Kiran Atma


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Hinduism - Where Is Kedarnath In India?


Kedarnath is a Himalayan village/town and holy location (tirtha) in the headwaters of the Mandakini River, one of the Ganges' tributaries.

The settlement is called after its reigning deity, Lord of Kedar, who is the god Shiva in his human form.

At Kedarnath, Shiva is represented by a linga, a pillar-shaped figure.

The Kedarnath linga is considered one of the twelve jyotirlingas, a network of Shiva-related locations.

The holiness of Kedarnath is only matched by the difficulties of reaching there.

Because of its great elevation—close to 12,000 feet—it is only accessible between late April and October, as are the three other important Himalayan pilgrim destinations of Yamunotri, Gangotri, and Badrinath.

A visit to Kedarnath retains some of the difficulty that was formerly associated with Himalayan pilgrimage.

Pilgrims complete the last 10 kilometers on foot or on horseback, which includes a five-thousand-foot ascent.

Those brave enough to undertake the journey must struggle with the unpredictability of mountain weather, but they may be rewarded with breathtaking views.

The Kedarnath temple is surrounded by alpine meadows and is sheltered by snow-capped mountains all year.

The Kedarnath linga is a natural ridge of stone that is said to represent Shiva's self-manifestation (svayambhu) and is thought to be very powerful.

The form of this linga is linked to the legend of Kedarnath's charter.

The five Pandava brothers, protagonists of the Mahabharata, the latter of the two major Hindu epics, are linked to one version of this narrative.

The Pandavas go on their last expedition towards the Himalayas in quest of Shiva's vision.

They eventually see him from afar, but when they attempt to approach him, Shiva transforms into a bull and charges through the snow.

The bull digs his way through a snowdrift.

When the Pandavas arrive, they discover the bull's corpse in the snow.

The hump of this bull is said to symbolize the ridge of granite that creates the Kedarnath linga.

The bull's head continues its journey over the highlands, eventually ending in Nepal as Pashupatinath.

A separate charter myth is based on the ancient belief that Shiva lives high in the Himalayas.

This legend associates the Panchkedar (a network of five Shiva temples in the Garhwal area) with five sections of Shiva's body, thereby uniting the god with the land and sanctifying it.

Kedarnath is Shiva's back, Madmaheshvar is Shiva's navel, Tungnath is Shiva's arm, Rudranath is Shiva's face, and Kalpeshvar is Shiva's matted hair (jata). 


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Hinduism - Who Is Skanda?

 


He is a Hindu deity who is Shiva's son.

Skanda is created to slay the demon Taraka, who has been granted the celestial benefit of being able to be destroyed only by a Shiva son.

Shiva is immersed in meditation following the loss of his wife Sati when Taraka makes this request, and it is improbable that such a son would ever be born.

After Taraka becomes too powerful, the other gods attempt to persuade Shiva to marry, which leads to Shiva's marriage to the goddess Parvati.

Skanda is born in an odd fashion, despite Shiva and Parvati's marriage.

Shiva and Parvati are said to be disturbed while making love, and Shiva accidentally spills his sperm over the ground (the word skand meaning "to spring" or "to ooze").

Semen is seen as a man's concentrated essence in Indian culture, which implies that for a god like Shiva, the semen is inordinately strong, capable of destroying the planet.

The deity Agni, who is fire personified, is the first to hold the semen, but it proves too strong for him.

Agni then throws it into the Ganges, which deposits a brilliant infant in the reeds along its bank after 10,000 years.

The kid is found by the Krittikas (personifications of the Pleiades), who all want to breastfeed him.

Skanda sprouts five more heads to appease them.

One of his epithets, Kartikkeya, is a symbol of the Krittikas' care.

Skanda grows quickly, ascends to the throne of Shiva's celestial troop (gana), and kills the thorny Taraka.

Unlike his brother Ganesh, who is a scholar and sage, his character remains that of a warrior prince.

Skanda is considered a part of Shiva's family in northern India, and although his power is acknowledged, he is not a prominent object of devotion.

Skanda has been linked to Murugan, a regional god connected with the hunt, but also with conflict, in southern India.

In this environment, he has undertaken a much larger position, notably in Tamil Nadu, and has taken on the mantle of a Shaiva Siddhanta philosopher and exponent.

~Kiran Atma


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Hinduism - Who Is Virabhadra?

 


Virabhadra is a powerful being created by the god Shiva to humble the demigod Daksha and destroy Daksha's sacrifice, according to Hindu mythology.


Daksha gives his daughter, Sati, to Shiva to marry, but later feels Shiva has not treated him with respect.

Daksha plans a large sacrifice and invites all the gods except Shiva to it in order to humble Shiva.

When Sati inquires as to why her father has done so, Daksha lashes out at Shiva, calling him worthless and despicable.

Sati, humiliated by these public insults, kills herself—in some versions, by leaping into the sacrificial fire, and in others, by withdrawing into a yogic trance and giving up her life.

When Shiva learns of Sati's death, he is enraged and tears two matted locks (jata) from his head and dashes them to the ground, according to the most popular version of Virabhadra's creation.

One matted lock assumes the form of Virabhadra, while the other assumes the form of Bhadrakali, the Goddess's most powerful and terrifying form.


Bhadrakali represents the Goddess's ferocious and dangerous side, in contrast to the gentle and loyal Sati, just as Virabhadra represents Shiva's destructive side.


The two demolish Daksha's sacrifice on Shiva's orders, scattering the guests and destroying the sacred fires, until Daksha repents and worships Shiva as the supreme deity.

Despite the fact that Virabhadra's actions in this story are destructive, he is and remains Shiva's servant, carrying out his divine master's commands, which ultimately uphold the created order.


~Kiran Atma


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Hinduism - Where Is Benares?




 

On the banks of the Ganges in Uttar Pradesh, there is a city and a holy center (tirtha). 



Benares is an anglicized version of the name Varanasi, which is one of the city's original Hindu names, along with Kashi and Avimukta. 


  • The titles Avimukta, Varanasi, and Kashi are all used to refer to the whole city, but in this case, they refer to concentric holy zones around the Vishvanath temple; Avimukta being the smallest, followed by Varanasi, and lastly Kashi. 
  • Benares, like all other pilgrimage sites along the Ganges, is revered for its closeness to the river, especially since the Ganges flows in a northerly direction at Benares, which is considered fortunate. 
  • The Ganges is an important element of Benares' identity, and it is the focus of most of the city's religious activity. 


The deity Shiva, however, is the most significant holy presence in the city. 


  • Benares is Shiva's home on Earth and the location where he never departs, thus the term Avimukta ("never forsaken"). 
  • The most significant Shiva temple is the Vishvanath (“Lord of the Universe”) temple, which is spread across the city—some ancient, some modern, and some almost forgotten. 
  • Vishvanath is one of Shiva's twelve jyotirlingas, a collection of holy Shiva locations. 



The Moghul emperor Aurangzeb demolished the old Vishvanath temple and replaced it with a mosque; the current Vishvanath temple was constructed close to the original spot. 



  • Benares is one of the seven holy towns where death gives soul freedom because of Shiva's everlasting presence (moksha). 
  • Shiva is said to appear to the dying individual at the time of death and give his salvific knowledge. 
  • Shiva's presence may also be felt at the holy location Manikarnika Ghat, which is located in the center of the city rather than on the outskirts like most other sites. 
  • Shiva gives humans a lesson here as well; particularly, Shiva warns them of their impending demise. 
  • This is not to make people sad or depressed, but to encourage them to pursue a genuine religious life. 


Benares is an excellent location to die or immerse oneself in spiritual life due to the presence of the Ganges and Shiva; yet, it is also an exceptionally lively place to live. 


  • It has a long history as a trade hub and market town, and it still is today, despite the fact that the creaking wooden boats that formerly traversed the Ganges have been replaced by other modes of transportation. 
  • Weavers and metalworkers, many of whom are Muslim, are well-known in Benares. 


For at least a few millenia, it has also been known as a cultural hub. 


  • From grammar to astrology to medicine, Benares is still one of India's most significant hubs for ancient Sanskritic study. 
  • It is also a hub for music, dancing, and the arts, and it has been home to a slew of Indian religious luminaries, including poet-saints Tulsidas, Ravidas, and Kabir, among others. 


Diana Eck, Banaras, 1999, provides a comprehensive account of the city and its inhabitants.




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HINDU RELIGION AND YOGA




    Yoga is spirituality, esotericism, or mysticism, not religion in the traditional sense. 


    Regardless of whether we are discussing Hinduism, Buddhism, Jainism, or Sikhism, Yoga is often linked to the cosmologies as well as religious beliefs and practices of these many traditions. 


    • This has proved to be a stumbling barrier for many Western Yoga practitioners, who are either unaware of these traditions or have a strained relationship with their own religious heritage, whether Christianity or Judaism. 
    • They are particularly taken aback by the many deities of the Hindu, Buddhist, and Jaina pantheons, and they are unsure how these deities connect to real Yoga practice and the doctrine of nondualism (advaita) that is common to most varieties of Yoga. 
    • Students who tend toward monotheism may be worried about falling to polytheism, which is regarded a sin in the Judeo-Christian faith. 

     

    Because the emphasis of this discussion is Hindu Yoga, I propose to begin by introducing the main Hindu Gods and Goddesses who figure in the Sanskrit and vernacular literature of Yoga. 



    Many Hindu deities are also part of the vast Buddhist pantheon, and the Jainas have mostly kept the same deities. 


    The different deities are worshiped and summoned as manifestations or personifications of the ultimate Reality, and each is regarded as the absolute Godhead in the perspective of their worshipers. 


    • For example, worshipers of God Shiva consider Shiva as transcendental, formless, and qualityless (nirgu­ na), yet bestow onto this featureless being the gift of devotion. 
    • Goodness, beauty, strength, and elegance are examples of anthropomorphic characteristics or attributes (guna). 


    All other gods are regarded as lofty beings that inhabit different celestial regions in comparison to Shiva (loka). 


    • They are known as archangels or angels in Christian language. 
    • The scenario is the polar opposite for Vishnu worshippers. 


    Vishnu is the ultimate Godhead for them, while all other gods—including Shiva—are simply devas, or "shining ones," who have a position comparable to angelic beings in Judeo-Christian and Islamic faiths. 



    • The deities were first understood from three perspectives: 

        • material (adhibhautika), 
        • psychological (adhyatmika), 
        • and spiritual (adhidaivika). 

    • The Vedic God Agni, for example, 

        • represents the physical sacrificial fire, 
        • the sacrificer's inner fire (connected to snake power or kundalint-shakti), 
        • and the divine fire or transcendent Light. 




    When considering a god, we must examine all three characteristics. 



    Most academics have concentrated only on the first component, leading them to reject Vedic spirituality as simply "naturalistic." 


    • However, a deeper examination reveals that the Vedic seers and sages were well-versed in symbolism and adept in the use of metaphoric language. 
    • It's our comprehension, not their symbolic communication, that's lacking. 

    India's "theologians" have talked about thirty-three deities since Vedic times, despite the fact that there have long been many more listed in the scriptures. 

    The following discussion will concentrate on only a few deities who are particularly connected with Yoga. 



    To begin, there is Shiva ("Benevolent One"). 


    Shiva is already referenced in the Rig-Veda (1.14; 2.33): Shaivism, or the Shaiva tradition of worship and religion, revolves around him. 


    • He is the god of yogins par excellence, and he is often portrayed as a yogin with long, matted hair, ashes on his body, and a garland of skulls—all indications of his complete sacrifice. 
    • The crescent moon in his hair represents mystical insight and wisdom. 
    • His three eyes, which represent the sun, moon, and fire, show all that has happened in the past, present, and future to him. 
    • The cosmic fire is linked to the central or "third" eye, which is situated on the forehead, and a single look from this eye may incinerate the whole universe. 

    The snake wrapped around his neck represents Kundalinf's hidden spiritual force. 


    • The Ganga (Ganges) River, which flows from Shiva's crown, is a symbol of continuous cleansing, which is the mechanism behind his gift of spiritual freedom to followers. 
    • His four limbs symbolize his complete mastery over the four cardinal directions, and the tiger hide on which he sits signifies power (shakti). 

    His trident symbolizes Nature's three basic characteristics (guna), tamas, rajas, and sattva. 


    • Shiva's most well-known animal is the bull Nandin ("Delightful"), a symbol of sexual energy that Shiva has harnessed to perfection. 
    • The lion, which is often shown in Shiva pictures, represents desire for food, which he has also subdued. 
    • Shiva has been linked to Rudra ("Howler") from the beginning, a god who is especially associated with the air element and its many expressions (e.g., wind, storm, thunder, and lightning, but also life force and the breath, etc.). 

    Rudra, on the other hand, is said to be a powerful healer, and Shiva's name alludes to the same function. 


    • Shiva became the destructive side of the renowned trinity (lri-murti) in later Hinduism, the other two being Vishnu (representing the principle of preservation) and Brahma (representing the principle of creation) (standing for Hindu Religion, Customs and Manners the principle of ereation). 
    • As a result, Shiva is often referred to as Hara ("Remover"). 

    He is often shown on Mount Kaitasa with his heavenly wife Piirvati ("She who dwells on the mountain"). 


    • He is regarded as the first instructor of esoteric knowledge in several Tantras. 
    • The Shaivas refer to him as Maheshvara ("Great Lord," from mahfi "great" and fsh vara "lord") because he is the ultimate Reality. 
    • Shankara is the name given to him as the source of pleasure or tranquility, and Shambhu is the name given to him as the home of enjoyment. 
    • Pashupati ("Lord of the Beasts"), ishana ("Ruler"), and, last but not least, Mahadeva are some of the other titles given to him ("Great God"). 

    The linga is another symbol that is often associated with Shiva and has various meanings. 


    • The term Shiva-linga is often mistranslated as "phallus," although it really means "sign" and represents the fundamental principle of creation. 
    • The linga (also known as "lingam" in English) is the undivided and causative creative heart of cosmic existence (prakriti). 
    • Its female counterpart is the yoni principle ("womb," "source"). 
    • Both of these concepts work together to create the tapestry of space-time. 

    The shiva-linga is worn as an amulet by certain Shaivas, particularly the Lingayatas, and stone or metal replicas of the linga placed in yoni bowls remind Tantric practitioners of the bipolar nature of all apparent existence: Shiva and Parvati (Shakti), or Consciousness and Energy, play in the world. 



    Among the Vaishnavas, Vishnu ("Pervader") is the object of worship: 



    Vishnu is referenced in the Rig-Veda, thus Vaishnavism has its origins in Vedic times (e.g., 1 .23; 1 54; 8. 1 2; 29). 


    • Hari ("Remover"), Narayana ("Abode of Humans"), and Vasudeva are some of his other notable names ("God of [all] things"). 
    • Vishnu is depicted in mythology as sleeping in a formless condition on the cosmic snake Shesha (or Ananta) floating in the endless ocean of unrnanifest existence between the various eras of world creation. 

    Vishnu, like Shiva, is often shown with four arms, which symbolize his omnipresence and power. 


    • The conch (symbol of creation), the discus (symbolizing the universal mind), the lotus (representing the unity), the bow and arrows (symbolizing the ego sense and the senses), the mace (symbolizing the life force), the lock of golden hair on the left side of his chest (symbolizing the core of Nature), and the chariot (symbolizing the mind as the principle) are among his attributes. 
    • Vishnu is believed to have incarnated many times in order to reestablish the moral order (dharma) on Earth. 



    The following are Vishnu's 10 incarnations (avatira, "de­scent"): 



    1. Matsya ("Fish") incarnated for the sole purpose of rescuing Manu Satyavrata, the founder of the human race, from the flood at the beginning of the current world era. 


    2. Kurma ("Tortoise") emerged from Vishnu's infinity to retrieve numerous riches lost after the flood, most notably the elixir of life. 


    • Using the cosmic snake (Ananta) as a rope and the cosmic mountain Mandara as a churning rod, both the deities (deva or sura) and the counter-deities (asura) cooperated in churning the global ocean. 
    • The rod was pivoted around Kurma. 
    • All of the lost riches were retrieved as a result of their churning, restoring global order and equilibrium. 

    3. Varaha ("Boar") was created with the task of destroying Hiranyaksha ("Golden-Eyed"), the demon who had inundated the whole world. 


    4. Nara-Simha ("Man-Lion") appeared to destroy the e v i l monarch Hiranyakashipu ("Golden Vestment"), who had failed to slay his Reproduced from Hinduson PrahJada, a famous devoVishnu astee of Vishnu. 


    • Hiranyakashipu could not be slain by a god, human being, or beast at any time of day or night, within or beyond the walls of his palace, thanks to a blessing bestowed by God Brahma. 
    • Nara-Simha appeared as a lion-headed person inside a pillar at twilight. 
    • He ripped apart the king's body with his claws, killing him. 


    5. Vamana ("Dwarf") incarnated specifically to kill the evil Bali, who had dethroned the gods and taken control of the world. 


    • He asked Bali for as much land as he could walk across in three paces.
    • The demon emperor was amused by the request and allowed it. 
    • Yamana took two steps to encompass all of creation, then put his foot on Bali's head and pushed him into the infernal regions with his third stride. 
    • Yamana bestowed rulership over the nether regions to Bali since he was not completely devoid of qualities. 
    • The three stages of Vishnu are previously mentioned in the Rig-Veda (e.g., l .23. 1 71 8, 20). 

    6. Parashu-Rama (also known as "Rama with the Ax") was a warlike manifestation of Rama. 


    • He demolished the warrior estate twenty-one times, implying a major conflict between the kshatriyas and the brahmins during the early Vedic period. 

    7. Rama ("Dark one" or "Pleasing one"), also known as Ramacandra, was the righteous king of Ayodhya Nara-Simha and a younger contemporary of Parashu-Rama. 


    • The Ramayana epic tells the tale of his life.
    • Sita ("Furrow"), who is frequently associated with the Goddess Lakshmi ("Good Sign") and represents the principles of marriage faithfulness, love, and devotion, was his wife. 
    • She was abducted by Ravana, a demon king whose realm may have been in Sri Lanka (formerly Ceylon), and saved by Hanumat, the monkey-headed demigod who symbolizes the ideal of loyal service. 

    8. Krishna ("Pul ler") was a God-man whose teachings are found throughout the Mahabharata epic, including the Bhagavad-Gfta and many other parts. 


    • The kali-yuga, which began with Krishna's death and will continue for thousands of years, is still in full flow. 


    9. Buddha ("Awakened One") was created to deceive evildoers and demons. 


    • Although some scholars dispute that this relates to Gautama the Buddha, there is little doubt that this was the intention of the brahmins who established the ten incarnation theory. 


    10. The avatara to come is Kalki ("THE BASE ONE"). 


    • He is depicted as riding a white horse and wielding a flaming sword in different Puranas. 
    • His mission will be to put the current world (yuga) to an end and the beginning of the following Golden Age, or Age of Truth (satya-yuga). 


    God Brahma is the most abstract of the Hindu trinity, and as a result, he has failed to captivate the imagination of the brahmins. 


    He is just the world's Creator. He must be distinguished from brahman, the nondual transcendental Reality, with caution. 

    Smartas, or followers of the Smritis (nonrevelato­ ry literature), are frequently characterized as those who do not belong to the major religious groups, such as Shaivism or Vaishnavism. 



    Gan­esha ("Lord of the Hosts")


    The elephant-headed God, is closely connected with God Shiva and is known by several other names, including Ganapati (which has the same meaning) and Vinayaka ("Leader"). 


    Ganesha hit the front pages of the New York Times and other major newspapers across the globe in 1995 for what has become known as the "milk miracle" (kshfra-camatkiira). 


    On September 2nd of that year, a normal Hindu in New Delhi dreamt that Ganesha was hungry for milk. 


    • When the guy awoke, he immediately rushed to the closest temple and, with the priest's permission, gave a scoop of milk to the statue of this god. 
    • The milk disappeared, much to his and the priest's surprise. 
    • The word spread quickly across the nation, and tens of millions of devoted Hindus rushed to the temples. 
    • Apparently, many others, including astonished doubters, saw the miracle in a variety of holy and non-religious places (such as Gane­ sha statues on car dashboards). 
    • The miracle ended as quickly as it had started, within twenty-four hours. 
    • Whatever perspective we take on the occasion, it allows us to consider the symbolism of the milk offering. 


    Milk was often blended with the legendary soma draft before it was given into the holy fire for the deities' pleasure, or it was imbibed by the sacrificial priest to enhance his connection with the deities in early Vedic times. 


    • Soma sacrifices were only comprehended and performed metaphorically in later times. 
    • Soma became the nectar of immortality, created by great concentration inside the human body. 
    • Milk, being a product of the holy cow, is steeped with symbolism. 

    Ganesha is especially associated with the sym­bolism of the life force (prana) and the serpent energy (kundalini), which causes the ambrosial liquid to flood the yogin's body after it has completely ascended to the psychospiritual center at the crown of the head. 



    Then we must seek out Durga ("She who is difficult to cross"). 


    Durga who symbolizes the cosmic force of destruction, namely the annihilation of the ego (ahamkara), which stands in the path of spiritual development and ultimate freedom. 


    • She is a loving mother only to those who follow the road of self-transcendence; everyone else is subjected to her anger. 
    • The embodiment of Durga's wrath, Kali ("Dark One"), is one of ten main Goddesses known as the "Great Wisdoms" (mahd-vidya).
    • Tara, Tripura Sundari, Bhuvaneshvari, Chinnamasta, Bhairavi, Dhumavati, BagaJamukhi, Matangi, and Kamala are the other goddesses. 
    • Chinnamasta ("She who has her head chopped off") is particularly significant for Yoga. 


    This ferocious Goddess is usually portrayed naked, with a garland of skulls around her neck stump, from which two streams of blood pour. 


    • In her left hand, she clutches her severed head. 
    • The Goddess chopped off her own head to feed her two attendants, Dakini and Vamini, or Jaya and Vijaya, according to several tales. 
    • This first sacrifice of the holy Mother, according to yogic interpretation, represents the left and right currents-idd and pinga/0, which must be sacrificed in order to induce the free flow of psychospiritual energy via the center channel (sushumno-nodi). 


    In order for enlightenment to occur, the head­ symbol of the mind-must be severed, that is, transcended. 


    • Sushumnasvara Bhasini, the Goddess's other name, suggests this yogic symbolism: "She who glows with the sound of the center channel." 
    • The Goddess Lakshmi, whose name is derived from lakshman ("sign") and meaning "Good Sign" or "Fortune," emphasizes the benevolent side of the Ultimate in its feminine form. 
    • The same element of the Divine is expressed by the South Indian Goddess Lalita Tripura Sundari ("Lovely Beauty of the Triple City"). 


    Rather than frightening (ugra) and horrific (saundarya), she is characterized as kind (saumya) and lovely (saundarya) (ghora). 


    • However, since Lakshmi and Lalita are seen as the ultimate Reality, they must also have a destructive side. 
    • The Divine, from our limited human perspective, is neither solely good nor solely negative, but it transcends all such classifications. 
    • The enormous Devi­ BhdgliJata, a Shakta counterpart of the Vaishnava Bhdgavata-Purona, which has been dated between the seventh and twelfth centuries, is the most significant Hindu book praising the Divine in its feminine form. 

    The great Goddess is presented as the universe's everlasting essence.



    You may also want to read more about Kundalini Yoga here.

    You may also want to read more about Yoga here.


    You may also want to read more about Yoga Asanas and Exercises here.


    You may also want to read more about Hinduism here.

    Be sure to check out my writings on religion here.





    Hinduism - Who Is Kama In The Hindu Pantheon?


    Kama is a minor deity who is the personification of the word kama ("desire").

    Kama is akin to the Greek god Eros in that he is in charge of sparking human sexual attraction and sensuous desire.

    Kama is shown as a young guy astride a parrot and wielding a bow and arrows.

    His five arrows are five different flowers, each bringing a different emotional effect to the person it pierces.

    The bow is a stalk of sugar cane, the bowstring a line of buzzing bees, and his five arrows are five different flowers, each bringing a different emotional effect to the person it pierces.

    Lotus, infatuation; ashoka, intoxication (with love); mango, tiredness; jasmine, pining; blue lotus, paralysis are the five flowers and feelings.

    The spring season (personified as another minor deity, Vasant) is seen as Kama's friend and ally in awakening desire through the regeneration of the natural world and the showy display of spring blossoms, and the spring season (personified as another minor deity, Vasant) is perceived as Kama's friend and ally in awakening desire through the regeneration of the natural world and the showy display of spring blossoms.

    The most famous tale in Kama's mythology starts with the rise to power of Taraka, a demon that can only be defeated by a Shiva son.

    Shiva has no sons and is in profound meditation, lamenting the loss of his wife Sati, therefore Taraka seems hard to overcome.

    The other gods implore Kama to strike Shiva with a desire arrow so that he might marry Parvati and have a son.

    Shiva is approached by Kama, who shoots him with an arrow.

    When Shiva discovers who has interrupted his meditation, he fires a jet of fire from his third eye in the centre of his forehead, instantaneously consuming Kama.

    Kama is eventually brought back to life by Shiva's mercy.

    Because to the loss of his body, one of Kama's epithets or other titles is Ananga, which means "bodiless" (and the fact that desire seems to strike in unseen ways).

    Despite being destroyed by Shiva and seeming to be defeated, Kama succeeds in achieving his aim.

    His effort to rouse Shiva from his medita tion is successful, and Shiva marries Parvati.

    Wendy Doniger O'Flaherty, Siva, 1981, has further information on Shiva and Kama's relationship. 


    You may also want to read more about Hinduism here.

    Be sure to check out my writings on religion here.