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True Doer Is The Divine, Not The Individual Ego – Hinduism Teaching

Beyond Ego: Embracing the Divine as the True Doer Human nature often leans toward taking credit for achievements, believing “I did this” or “I made that happen.” This identification fuels the ego, creating a sense of separation and self-importance. Yet, in the heart of Hindu teaching lies a transformative insight: the individual self is not the ultimate agent; the Divine alone orchestrates all. Recognizing this shifts our perspective from prideful ownership of actions to humble participation in a larger cosmic play.  The Illusion of Egoic Doership The ego thrives on the belief that “I am the doer.” When a project succeeds, the ego basks in praise; when failure strikes, it crumbles or seeks excuses. This fluctuating self-image breeds anxiety, competition, envy, and conflict. In truth, we are instruments—bodies, minds, and senses—through which life unfolds. Resources, talents, opportunities, and even desires arise within a field of forces far greater than our individual selves. To...

June 24 2026 Tithi – Panchang – Hindu Calendar – Good Time – Nakshatra – Rashi

Tithi in Panchang – Hindu Calendar on Wednesday, June 24 2026 – It is Shukla Paksha Dashami tithi or the tenth day during the waxing phase of moon in Hindu calendar and Panchang in most regions. It is Shukla Paksha Dashami tithi or the tenth day during the waxing phase of moon till 8 :09 PM on June 24. Then onward it is Shukla Paksha Ekadashi tithi or the eleventh day during the waxing phase of moon till 9 :14 PM on June 25. (Time applicable in all north, south and eastern parts of India. All time based on India Standard Time.)  Good – Auspicious time on June 24, 2026 as per Hindu Calendar – Good and auspicious time on the entire day.  Nakshatra  – Chitra or Chithirai or Chithira nakshatra till 4:40 PM on June 24. Then onward it is Chothi or Swathi nakshatra till 6:21 PM on June 25. (Time applicable in north, south and eastern parts of India).  In western parts of India (Maharashtra, Gujarat, Goa, north Karnataka and south Rajasthan), Chitra or Chithirai ...

Story of Mekhala and Kankhala – Mahamudra Siddhi – Greatness Of Tantra

The Severed Heads and the Deathless Mind: Mekhala, Kankhala, and the Mahamudra Path Two Women, One Truth Among the eighty-four Mahasiddhas celebrated in the Tantric traditions of India and Tibet, few figures are as arresting or as instructive as the sisters Mekhala and Kankhala. Their story does not begin in a forest hermitage or a royal court. It begins exactly where most human suffering begins — inside the walls of ordinary domestic life, in the grinding weight of social expectation, shame, and emotional exhaustion. These two sisters were married women, embedded in households that diminished them. The humiliation they endured was not dramatic but relentless — the slow erosion of self-worth that comes from being constantly judged, criticized, and dismissed. They were not seekers by birth. They became seekers because suffering left them no other honest choice. The Encounter with the Guru In their desperation they sought out a wandering Tantric master. What they received from him was no...

The Three Great Avatara Kshetrams— Ayodhya, Mathura and Ahobilam - Sacred Ground of the Divine

Where the Divine Descended — The Holy Significance of Ayodhya, Mathura and Ahobilam The Concept of Avatara Kshetram In the Vaishnava tradition, an Avatara Kshetram is a place rendered eternally sacred by the physical descent of the Supreme Being onto the earth. Unlike ordinary pilgrimage centres that derive their sanctity from association with sages, rivers, or divine events, an Avatara Kshetram holds the unique distinction of being the very ground upon which the Lord chose to take form. Among the many such sacred places celebrated across Bharatavarsha, three stand out as the most prominent — Ayodhya, the birthplace of Sri Rama; Mathura, the birthplace of Sri Krishna; and Ahobilam, the place of manifestation of Sri Narasimha. Ayodhya — The City of Sri Rama Situated on the banks of the sacred river Sarayu in present-day Uttar Pradesh, Ayodhya is one of the seven Moksha-puri or cities that grant liberation. It is the Avatara Kshetram of Sri Rama, the seventh avatar of Vishnu, who d...

Nirvichara Samapthi

"Nirvichara Samapthi" refers to a state of profound mental absorption or concentration achieved through the practice of Yoga, specifically as described in the Yoga Sutras attributed to the ancient sage Patanjali. In the Yoga Sutras (1.42-44), Patanjali delineates four types of samapatti, or states of absorption: savitarka and nirvitarka, savichara and nirvichara. Savitarka: This is the state of concentration where the mind is focused on an object along with its associated reasoning or conceptualization. Nirvitarka: In this state, concentration deepens to the point where conceptualization or reasoning is absent, but awareness of the object remains. Savichara: This is a state where the mind is absorbed in an object along with subtle thought processes or reflection. Nirvichara: Nirvichara samapti denotes a deeper level of concentration where the mind is fully absorbed in the object without any subtle thought processes. It is a state of pure awareness devoid of any mental a...

Kankala Murti Form of Shiva – Iconography

 Kankala Murti — The Bone-Staff Bearer: Shiva as the Supreme Wanderer Beyond Death The Form and Its Place Among Shiva's Many Aspects Among the numerous iconographic forms of Shiva celebrated in the Shaiva Agamas and the Puranic tradition, Kankala Murti occupies a place of singular power and profundity. At first glance, this form bears a close resemblance to Bhikshatana — Shiva as the wandering mendicant who moves through the worlds seeking alms. Both forms are depicted as a beautiful, unencumbered wanderer, moving freely beyond all social boundaries, drawing devotees and cosmic beings alike with the force of his luminous presence. Yet Kankala Murti is not merely a variation of Bhikshatana. It is a distinct and independently significant form, separated from Bhikshatana by one defining element: the kankala danda, the staff of bones, which the deity carries upon his shoulder. While Bhikshatana prominently bears the kapala — the skull cup — and often the trishula, the three-pronged spe...

Mahavici Hell In Hinduism

Mahavici: The Hell of Raging Waves In the ancient Hindu vision of the afterlife, Mahavici is one of the seventeen infernal realms where souls are sent to atone for severe transgressions. Unlike milder punishments that involve cold winds or burning pits, Mahavici subjects its inhabitants to unending submersion in surging, torrential waves. Here, the sinner is tossed about by ceaseless currents, unable to find rest or respite, experiencing the dual torment of physical drowning and unquenchable fear. Symbolism of the Surging Waves The relentless waves of Mahavici carry deep symbolic meaning. Water, which in its balanced form sustains life and purifies the soul, becomes a force of destruction when it overwhelms the righteous order. In this realm, the waves represent the turning of dharma (righteous duty) into adharma (unrighteousness): actions that once were sources of growth and cleansing now become agents of punishment. The eternal flux of the water mirrors the restless minds of wrong...

Karkotaka Sayana Form Of Vishnu At Namakkal Ranganatha Swamy Temple

Karkotaka Sayanam: The Divine Slumber of Lord Ranganatha at Namakkal A Sacred Hill Town in Tamil Nadu Namakkal, a town in the Salem district of Tamil Nadu, is celebrated as one of the most spiritually significant pilgrimage destinations in South India. Nestled around a massive granite rock formation, this town is home to a cluster of ancient temples that draw devotees from across the country throughout the year. Among these sacred shrines, the Ranganatha Temple, situated to the east of the hill and behind the revered Narasimha Temple, holds a place of exceptional religious importance. The Unique Posture of Bhagavan Ranganatha The presiding deity of this temple is Lord Ranganatha, a form of Lord Vishnu seen in the Shayana posture, that is, in a state of divine reclining rest. What makes this particular form extraordinarily rare is the specific orientation and the nature of the serpent on which the Lord reposes. Unlike the more commonly seen Shayana Vishnu forms at Srirangam or Thiruvana...

Narasimha –The Most Personal And Shortest Avatar Of Vishnu

Narasimha – The Most Personal Avatar: When Vishnu Descended for One Devotee The Most Personal of All Avatars Among the ten principal Avatars of Vishnu described in Vaishnava tradition, the Narasimha Avatar holds a place unlike any other. While most Avatars were taken to protect the cosmic order, to vanquish armies of Asuras, or to restore the fabric of Dharma across the world, the Narasimha Avatar was taken for the sake of one single person — a young boy named Prahlada, whose unwavering devotion to Vishnu had brought him to the edge of death at the hands of his own father. This intimate character of the avatar makes it uniquely moving in the entire corpus of Vaishnava belief. It is not the vastness of the Cosmos that Vishnu saves here, but a single child's faith. In this lies one of the deepest teachings of this sacred account — that to the Lord, the sincere prayer of even one devotee is enough to move the entire universe. The Context: Hiranyakashipu and the Boon of Near-Immo...

The Double Standard of Dharma in Kali Yuga By The Powerful

One Sin, Two Verdicts: The Moral Hypocrisy of Kali Yuga and What Hindu Dharma Says About Justice - How Kali Yuga Celebrates the Sins of the Powerful and Condemns the Struggles of the Common Man There is a pattern so deeply embedded in modern society that most people have stopped questioning it. When a powerful celebrity, politician, or wealthy influencer indulges in behaviour that tradition and scripture would consider adharmic — multiple marriages, relationships with partners young enough to be their children, or the open purchase of companionship — the media turns it into entertainment. Gossip columns celebrate it. Followers admire it. Awards are given. Films are made. But when an ordinary man or woman on the street does the very same thing, the verdict is swift and merciless. Society judges. Media prosecutes. Neighbours condemn. Family disowns. The act is identical. The judgment is worlds apart. This is not merely a social observation. Hindu Dharma saw this coming thousands of y...

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