From Tenderness to Terror: Why Shakti Must Be Both Mother and Destroyer - Understanding Why the Divine Mother Cannot Always Be Gentle
There is a moment in every morning when the light changes.
The soft golden haze of dawn, tender and enveloping, gradually withdraws. In
its place arrives something sharper, more demanding. The sun climbs toward its
peak and the warmth that once comforted now penetrates, scorches, and
transforms. This is not a failure of the sun. This is the sun becoming fully
itself.
In the living tradition of Shaktism, this daily drama of
light is not merely natural observation. It is theology. It is the very nature
of the Divine Mother, Shakti, the supreme cosmic power who underlies all of
existence. She is not one thing. She cannot be. Because reality itself is not
one thing.
The Vastness of Bhuvaneshvari and What Follows
Among the ten Mahavidyas, the great wisdom forms of the
Goddess, Bhuvaneshvari holds a particular kind of majesty. Her name means she
whose body is the entire universe. She is spaciousness itself. Sitting in the
early morning of cosmic time, she represents the open sky, the silence before
creation stirs, the mother who holds everything within herself without
grasping. Her gesture is that of fearlessness and gift-giving, the abhaya and
varada mudras. She is infinite tenderness made visible.
But the Mahavidyas do not stop with Bhuvaneshvari. The
tradition insists on continuing. What follows her is Bhairavi, the fierce one,
whose red complexion blazes like fire, whose garland speaks of impermanence,
whose roar shakes the foundations of comfort. And there is Chhinnamasta, who
severs her own head and drinks her own blood, feeding her attendants from her
own life force. And there is Kali, the great dissolver, standing beyond time,
beyond form, beyond the categories that make the human mind feel safe.
The Devi Bhagavata Purana makes clear that these are not
different goddesses in opposition to one another. They are one power expressing
itself across the full spectrum of existence.
Why the Mother Must Also Destroy
The question that troubles many approaching Shaktism for the
first time is honest and important. If she is the mother, why does she carry a
sword? If she loves her children, why does she wear a garland of skulls? If she
is the source of all life, why is she also the force of dissolution?
The answer lies in understanding what a mother actually
does. Not a sentimental, idealized mother, but the real function of motherhood
as Shaktism understands it. A true mother does not only comfort. She also
corrects. She does not only give. She also refuses. She does not only nurture
what exists. She also clears away what has become an obstacle to growth.
The Devi Mahatmya, one of the foundational texts of Shakta
tradition, opens with the world in crisis. The gods themselves have been
defeated. Order has collapsed. It is precisely in this condition of maximum
darkness and helplessness that the Goddess manifests. She does not arrive as
consolation. She arrives as the power that demolishes what could not be
reformed.
As stated in the Devi Mahatmya: "Ya Devi sarvabhuteshu
shakti rupena samsthita, namastasyai namastasyai namastasyai namo namah" —
To the Goddess who is present in all beings as power, salutation to her,
salutation to her, again and again salutation to her.
She is not praised here for her softness alone. She is
praised for her power, in its entirety.
Shakti as the Complete Spectrum of Cosmic Energy
In Shaktism, Shakti is understood as the dynamic principle
of the universe. Without her movement, Shiva himself remains inert, the pure,
unchanging witness with no capacity to act within the world of forms. She is
the energy that makes the cosmos breathe. And energy, by its very nature, is
not uniformly gentle.
The tantric texts speak of Shakti operating through three
fundamental qualities called the three gunas. Tamas is inertia, darkness, the
heaviness of deep matter. Rajas is fierce activity, passion, the burning drive
that propels change. Sattva is clarity, luminosity, balance. The Goddess
contains all three. She is not locked into sattva alone, into the peaceful and
the pleasant. To be the mother of all existence, she must govern all the
qualities of existence.
This is why the goddess Durga, riding her lion into battle,
is not a warrior in spite of being a mother. She is a warrior because she is a
mother. The great buffalo demon Mahishasura had taken a form that could not be
touched by any single force in the cosmos. He had accumulated a kind of
invulnerability through ego and acquisition. Only the combined power of all the
gods, flowing together into the form of the Goddess, was sufficient to meet
him. The Devi Bhagavata Purana describes how each deity contributed their
essential power to her form. She was not apart from their strength. She was
their strength unified and focused.
The lesson embedded in this sacred account is not trivial.
There are forms of darkness in the world and within the individual self that
cannot be negotiated with. They cannot be dissolved by kindness alone. They
require the full force of awakened awareness meeting them directly.
The Symbolism of Midday: When Softness Must Yield
The movement from Bhuvaneshvari to Bhairavi in the Mahavidya
sequence mirrors the movement of the sun across the sky. Dawn belongs to
Bhuvaneshvari, to openness, possibility, the unformed potential of a new
beginning. But the day does not stay at dawn. Life does not stay at its most
tender moment.
Midday arrives with its full, uncompromising heat. Nothing
is hidden under midday light. Every shadow is burned away. What cannot survive
the full revelation of light will not survive the day. This is not cruelty.
This is the natural function of the sun, and of truth.
The symbolism here carries enormous weight in the tantric
understanding of spiritual practice. The practitioner who approaches the
Goddess only seeking comfort, only seeking the tender embrace of the universal
mother, has understood only half of what she is. The full encounter with Shakti
demands that the practitioner be willing to be burned. Old identities must be
released. Attachments that have calcified into prisons must be broken open. The
Goddess as the intense midday sun does not apologize for this. The Kali Tantra
and the Mahanirvana Tantra both emphasize that transformation without
dissolution is incomplete. Something must end so that something genuine may
begin.
The Living Teaching for the Present Age
We live in a time that seeks comfort above almost all else.
The spiritual marketplace is flooded with teachings about peace, acceptance,
gentle flow, and effortless abundance. These are genuine gifts of the
tradition, and there is real truth in them. But Shaktism, the tradition that
has always placed the Goddess at the very summit of reality, insists on
something more demanding.
The same cosmic force that births the stars also collapses
them into supernovas. The same energy that brings the monsoon also brings the
flood. The same mother who feeds her child also teaches that child to face
hunger, difficulty, and loss. Shielding a child from every hardship does not
produce a capable human being. And the Divine Mother, who has the whole arc of
a soul's journey within her vision, is not interested in producing spiritual
children who cannot face the fire.
In daily life, this teaching translates into something
profoundly practical. When circumstances are painful, when things are breaking
down, when what was familiar is being stripped away, Shaktism invites a radical
reframe. This too is Shakti. The dissolution is not the absence of grace. It
may be grace in its most concentrated form.
She Holds All of It
The deepest insight of Shakta philosophy is that the Divine
Mother does not oscillate between love and ferocity as if she were moody or
inconsistent. She holds both simultaneously, just as the sun holds both the
warmth that sustains life and the radiation that can destroy it. These are not
contradictions in her. They are the full expression of what it means to be the
ground of all existence.
To worship Shakti fully is to accept reality fully. Not the
edited, comfortable version. The whole thing. The dawn and the midday blaze.
The open sky of Bhuvaneshvari and the consuming fire of Bhairavi. The loving
embrace and the sword.
She cannot always be the gentle mother because existence itself is not always gentle. And she is nothing less than existence itself.