When a Hunter's Bhakti Outshone a Saint's Tapasya Padmapadacharya, one of the foremost disciples of Adi Shankaracharya, lived a life filled with lesser known miracles. As a young boy, before he met his Guru, he retreated into the Sahyadri mountains determined to have darshan of Bhagavan Narasimha. He performed long purascharana, intense repeated recitation of mantras, yet the divine form did not appear before him. During this period he encountered a paradhi, a tribal hunter, who asked the boy whom he was seeking so deep in the forest. The boy described Narasimha in detail. The very next morning, the hunter arrived carrying Narasimha bound in ropes, as though the deity himself had walked into captivity. Astonished and humbled, Padmapada asked Narasimha directly how a simple hunter had captured him while years of disciplined tapasya had yielded nothing. Narasimha replied that the hunter possessed one pointed dedication, ananya bhakti, and it was this singular focus that allow...