hinduism

  • Aham Brahmāsmi: What It Really Means?

    The phrase “Aham Brahmāsmi”—अहं ब्रह्मास्मि—comes from the Bṛhadāranyaka Upaniṣad (1.4.10). It is a very important statement from our Vedic thoughts. Although it became popular again because of the show Sacred Games, the way it was used there is far from its original meaning. The grandeur and the worldly implication that was attached to this mantra…

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  • The Trailokya Vijaya Kavacham – Shield of the Three Worlds

    In the pages of the Brahmanda Purana, a powerful episode unfolds — one that reminds us that protection is not merely physical but deeply spiritual. Here, the text introduces the Trailokya Vijaya Kavacham — a “shield of victory over the three worlds.” What makes this kavacham unique is not just its poetic beauty but the…

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  • Grief, Resurrection, and the Divine Empowerment of Parashurama

    Renuka’s Grief and Rama’s Vow When Kartavirya’s men assaulted the hermitage, the unthinkable happened—Rishi Jamadagni was struck down. His wife Renuka, heartbroken, wailed in despair, wounding herself in anguish. Her cries echoed across the forest until her son Rama (later Parashurama) returned and saw the blood-stained ground. In grief and fury, he swore a vow:…

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  • The Divine Cow, Greed, and the Fall of Kings

    The Visit of Kartavirya Arjuna After a day of hunting in the forest with a large army, King Kartavirya Arjuna arrived at the hermitage of Rishi Jamadagni, father of Bhagwan Parashurama. The sage, upholding the ancient tradition of Atithi Devo Bhava (the guest is like God), offered hospitality. But the king, in pride, politely declined,…

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  • The Birth of Names: Rudra, the Eight Forms, and the Sacred Bodies of the Cosmos

    Introduction: When Divinity Cries In the great unfolding described in the Brahmanda Purana, creation doesn’t just occur—it emerges through dialogue, emotion, and elemental association. In a remarkable narrative sequence, Brahma bestows eight names to a crying divine child named Nilalohita, each name corresponding to a distinct body and elemental association. This divine child, in his…

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  • Vishnu, Kala, and the Shape of Time: A Seeker’s Reflection on Cosmic Rhythm

    Introduction: Time, Not as We Know It What is time, really? Is it the ticking of the clock, the change of seasons, the wrinkles on our faces? Or could it be something far more fluid, more mysterious—something we don’t move through, but that moves with us or through us? In my recent readings, I came…

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  • The Conch That Remembered: Krishna, Panchajana, and the Sound of a Soul Returned

    Krishna, the Ocean Demon, and the Missing Boy In the Bhagavata Purana, we find one of the more enigmatic and layered stories from Krishna’s youth—a tale involving a lost child, a sea-dwelling demon, and a conch that would later shake the battlefield of Kurukshetra. After completing their studies under Sage Sandipani, Krishna and Balarama offer…

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  • Time as a Bridge Between Science and ScriptureTime is not just a ticking clock or a linear progression from past to future. In the deepest layers of both scientific thought and spiritual literature, time is an expansive, multi-dimensional force. While modern cosmology defines time using space-time coordinates, quantum uncertainties, and thermodynamic arrows, ancient Hindu scriptures…

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