Basant Panchmi
01 Feb 2025 12:11 PMArticle
20 Feb 2025 03:15 PM Article
When we speak of Shaivism, the question arises “Who is Shiv?”
In the Puranas, we come across different depictions of Shiv - benevolent as well as fearsome.
In benevolent aspects, he is depicted as an omniscient yogi who lives like a mendicant on Mount Kailash, and also as a householder who is married to Parvati and has two sons, Ganesha and Kartikeya.
In his fearsome aspect, he is depicted as the slayer of demons. As the patron god of Yog, meditation, and arts, Shiv is revered as Adiyogi.
Among his various representations in art, the most popular is Nataraj, the Lord of Dance.
The iconographic attributes of Shiv are the serpent adorning his neck; the crescent Moon; Ganga flowing from his matted hair; the third eye on his forehead as Trilochan; the Trishul, trident as his weapon; Nandi, the bull, as his vehicle; and the damru, drum, that represents the cosmic soul of creation.
In contrast, in the inner dimension, Shiv is perceived as Neel Purush, the Blue Being. Ultimate Reality, who abides in the highest spiritual center in the sahasrar region, the brain.
In Kashmir, Shaivism, the inquiry about Ultimate Reality starts not with the third person but with the first person, with Shiv ‘here’- within oneself as one’s own higher Self.
With the mind getting dissolved in consciousness, realisation dawns upon the seeker that nothing exists apart from Shiv.
01 Feb 2025 12:11 PMArticle
04 Jan 2025 05:29 PMArticle
28 Sep 2024 05:35 PMArticle
10 Feb 2024 03:58 PMArticle
10 Feb 2024 03:29 PMArticle