The Hunger That Cannot Be Filled — Why Chamunda Is Shown As Skeletal and Emaciated When Chamunda first erupts into sacred account in the Devi Mahatmya — the seventh-century hymn of the Markandeya Purana that forms the doctrinal spine of Shaktism — she arrives in a way unlike almost any other divine figure in the Hindu tradition. She does not descend from a heavenly realm. She is not summoned by a male deity. She does not arise from the ocean or from fire. She bursts from the brow of the Goddess herself, fully formed, fully furious, wholly independent. There is no Purusha at her side. No masculine counterpart lending her power or conferring her authority. She is Shakti acting upon itself. She is the Goddess generating force directly from her own awareness. This aloneness is not incidental. It is the first and most important teaching encoded in her form. In the Devi Mahatmya (Chapters 7–8), when the demons Chanda and Munda approach the battlefield to capture the Goddess, she transforms w...