--> Skip to main content

Posts




The Cin Mudra in Hindu Sculpture and Philosophy - Gesture of Supreme Knowledge

Cin Mudra: The Sacred Hand Gesture of Inner Wisdom and Enlightenment In the vast visual theology of Hindu sacred art, every line, curve, and contour of a sculpted form carries deliberate meaning. Among the most profound of these visual expressions is the mudra — a sacred hand gesture that communicates spiritual states, divine qualities, and philosophical truths without a single spoken word. The Cin Mudra, also rendered as Chin Mudra, stands among the most revered of these gestures, embodying the eternal transmission of wisdom from teacher to disciple, from the divine to the human. Form and Posture of the Gesture The Cin Mudra is formed with elegant simplicity. The thumb and index finger are brought together in a gentle, relaxed circle, while the remaining three fingers — the middle, ring, and little — extend softly outward in an open, unhurried manner. There is no rigidity in this gesture. The contact between thumb and forefinger is light, almost meditative, reflecting the calm and...

Holding Grudge Is Like You Drinking Poison And Waiting For The Person To Die – Hinduism Insights

The Great Grudge Guide: Why Holding Onto Anger is Like Drinking Poison and Expecting Your Enemy to Drop Dead Imagine this: You're sitting in your favorite chair, sipping a cup of steaming hot poison, and waiting for your neighbor to keel over. Sounds ridiculous, right? Well, congratulations! You've just understood the ancient Hindu wisdom about holding grudges. It's about as logical as trying to set someone else's house on fire while standing inside it with a matchbox. The Grudge Hall of Fame: When Anger Goes Epically Wrong Hindu scriptures are packed with cautionary tales about grudges that make modern soap operas look like children's bedtime stories. Take Duryodhana, for instance. This man turned holding a grudge into an art form. His jealousy toward his Pandava cousins didn't just ruin his lunch – it destroyed entire kingdoms, wiped out bloodlines, and turned the battlefield of Kurukshetra into the world's most expensive therapy session. Then there...

July 26 2026 Tithi – Panchang – Hindu Calendar – Good Time – Nakshatra – Rashi

Tithi in Panchang – Hindu Calendar on Sunday, July 26 2026 – It is Shukla Paksha Dwadashi tithi or the twelfth day during the waxing or light phase of moon in Hindu calendar and Panchang in most regions. It is Shukla Paksha Dwadashi tithi or the twelfth day during the waxing or light phase of moon till 1 :59 PM on July 26. Then onward it is Shukla Paksha Trayodashi tithi or the thirteenth day during the waxing or light phase of moon till 4 :00 PM on July 27. (Time applicable in all north, south and eastern parts of India. All time based on India Standard Time.)  Good – Auspicious time on July 26, 2026 as per Hindu Calendar – There is no good and auspicious time on the entire day.  Nakshatra  – Jyeshta or Kettai or Triketta nakshatra till 8:49 AM on July 26. Then onward it is Mool or Moolam nakshatra till 11:26 AM on July 27. (Time applicable in north, south and eastern parts of India).  In western parts of India (Maharashtra, Gujarat, Goa, north Karnataka...

You Do What You Like: Bhima's Choice of Cook in the Incognito Year

Ballava the Cook: Bhima and the Wisdom of Following One's Nature After the completion of the twelve years of exile, the Pandavas faced their most delicate challenge: the thirteenth year, to be spent incognito. If discovered, the terms of their exile demanded they begin the entire cycle of banishment afresh. As narrated in the Virata Parva of the Mahabharata, the five brothers along with Draupadi arrived at the kingdom of King Virata and each chose a disguise and occupation suited to their inner nature. Yudhishthira became a courtier skilled in dice, Arjuna took the guise of a dance and music teacher, Nakula became a keeper of horses, and Sahadeva a tender of cattle. Bhima, however, made an announcement that reveals deep self-knowledge: he would become Ballava, the superintendent of King Virata's kitchen. Bhima's Own Words and Their Meaning Bhima declared that he would cook such dishes for the king that he would surpass every chef who had served before him, thereby winni...

The Vanished Verses: Unravelling the Mystery of Jaimini's Mahabharata

 Jaimini Bharata: The Forbidden Retelling of the Great Epic The Mahabharata, composed by Maharshi Krishna Dvaipayana Vyasa, is traditionally described as being taught to five disciples, each of whom produced his own recension of the epic. The Adi Parva records this transmission directly. Vyasa is said to have compiled the Vedas and then taught the fifth Veda, the Mahabharata, to Sumantu, Jaimini, Paila, his own son Shuka, and to his disciple Vaishampayana, publishing the Bharata Samhita through each of them separately. Of these five versions, only Vaishampayana's recital, narrated at Janamejaya's snake sacrifice and transmitted further by Ugrashrava Sauti, survives in complete form. This is the Mahabharata known to the world today. Jaimini, also celebrated as the author of the Purva Mimamsa philosophical school, composed his own version, of which only his Ashvamedha Parva exists in full, narrated by Jaimini himself to Janamejaya. The remaining sections are considered lost, th...

The Sacred Drum: Sound, Symbol, and Spiritual Truth in Hindu Tradition

Rhythm of the Cosmos: The Drum as a Spiritual Symbol in Hinduism In Hindu thought, the universe itself was born from sound. Before form, before light, before creation took shape, there was Nada — the primordial sound. The drum, in its most essential nature, is a physical vessel for this cosmic truth. It does not merely make noise; it echoes the first vibration that set all existence into motion. To strike a drum in a sacred context is, in a very real sense, to participate in the act of creation. The Nataraja form of Shiva — the cosmic dancer — holds the damaru, the hourglass drum, in one of his four hands. The sound of the damaru symbolises the moment of creation, the first syllable from which all language, all knowledge, and all matter emerge. The damaru is not an accessory; it is a theological statement. The Damaru and Its Cosmic Significance The damaru is perhaps the most recognisable sacred drum in Hinduism. Its two-faced structure — two triangular drum faces joined at a narr...

Pachare Jatra: The Sacred Union of Five Goddesses and Their Timeless Symbolism

Pahachare Festival: Divine Feminine Power, Protection, and the Spirit of the Newar Tradition The name Pachare, or Pahachare, carries layers of meaning rooted in the Newar civilization of the Kathmandu Valley. "Paha" means guest, and "Chahre" refers to Chaturdashi, the fourteenth lunar day. Together, the name evokes the idea of welcoming the divine as an honored guest on this sacred lunar date. The festival falls on the Chaturdashi of Chaitra Krishna Paksha, the dark fortnight of the month of Chaitra, which typically corresponds to March or April. This day is also traditionally known as Pishach Chaturdashi, a day of deep spiritual significance when the boundary between the seen and unseen worlds is understood to be at its thinnest. Being the last Chaturdashi of the Nepali lunar year, Pachare holds a particular finality. It marks a religious and spiritual threshold, a moment to cleanse the self and the community of all accumulated burdens before the new cycle begins...

Difference Between A Hindu Temple And A Buddhist Temple

Residence of the Divine and Path of the Dharma: Key Differences Between Hindu and Buddhist Temples Hinduism and Buddhism originated in the Indian subcontinent and share certain cultural and spiritual foundations. Both traditions revere sacred spaces, encourage ethical living, and guide devotees toward spiritual growth. However, the purpose, structure, symbolism, and religious functions of Hindu temples and Buddhist temples differ significantly because they arise from distinct theological and philosophical worldviews. Understanding these differences helps us appreciate the unique role that temples play within each tradition. The Hindu Temple: Residence of the Divine In Hinduism, a temple (mandir) is fundamentally the abode of a deity. It is not merely a congregation hall or a place for communal prayer. According to Agama and temple traditions, the deity is treated as a living divine presence established through the sacred rite of Prana Pratishtha, which invites the divine presence...

The Universe Is Never Designed to Work According to Human Likes, Desires, and Dislikes - Hinduism Insights

The Universe Is Indifferent to Human Likes, Desires, and Dislikes Human beings suffer not because the universe is cruel, but because they carry a silent contract in their minds: that life must unfold according to their liking. The moment reality departs from this private script, pain follows. This is not a modern psychological insight alone; it is one of the oldest observations in Hindu thought. The universe, or jagat , was never designed around human preference. It runs on its own order, its own rhythm, its own law - and expecting it to bend to personal desire is, as the Hindu sages repeatedly point out, the very definition of ignorance, or avidya . What the Scriptures Say The Bhagavad Gita addresses this directly. Krishna tells Arjuna: "matra-sparsas tu kaunteya shitoshna-sukha-duhkha-dah, agamapayino 'nityas tams titikshasva bharata" (Bhagavad Gita, Chapter 2, Verse 14) The contact between the senses and their objects gives rise to fleeting experiences of heat ...

Shiva Pancha Brahma Mantra On Shiva The Aghori

Beyond Fear and Purity: The Aghora Vision of Shiva in Shiva Pancha Brahma Mantra The Mantra Sanskrit: अघोरेभ्योऽथ घोरेभ्यो घोरघोरतरेभ्यः सर्वेभ्यः सर्वशर्वेभ्यो नमस्ते अस्तु रुद्र रूपेभ्यः Transliteration: Aghorebhyo'tha Ghorebhyo Ghora-Ghoratarebhyah Sarvebhyah Sarva-Sharvebhyo Namaste Astu Rudra Rupebhyah Meaning: "Salutations to all the forms of Rudra — to those that are Aghora (benign), to those that are Ghora (terrible), and to those that are even more intensely terrible. To all, to every form of Sharva, I offer my salutations." The Heart of Aghora This single verse from the Shiva Panchabrahma Mantra — drawn from the Krishna Yajurveda's Taittiriya Aranyaka — holds within it one of the most profound philosophical declarations in all of Shaiva tradition. It does not ask Shiva to be only gentle, only beautiful, or only comforting. It bows equally to every form — the terrifying, the more terrifying, and beyond. This is the very soul of the Aghora ...

🐄Test Your Knowledge

🧠 Quick Quiz: Hindu Blog

🚩Name of Daughter of Dasharatha Of Ramayana

  • A. Shanta
  • B. Ulupi
  • C. Ambalika
  • D. Ahalya



🕉️Contents To Explore

Show more