Posts

Showing posts from March, 2026

7 Bhagavad Gita tips for a peaceful mind

7 Bhagavad Gita tips for a peaceful mind   If the mind is not at peace, nothing else truly feels enough. A person may have money, success, relationships, and comfort, yet still feel restless from within. This is exactly what the Bhagavad Gita tries to teach. Arjuna was standing on a battlefield, but his real battle was inside his own mind. He was confused, fearful, emotional, and unable to think clearly. Krishna did not simply tell him to be strong. He taught him how to find peace even in the middle of pressure and uncertainty. Today, people may not be standing on battlefields, but they are fighting stress, anxiety, comparison, anger, overthinking, and endless pressure. That is why the Bhagavad Gita still feels so relevant. Its teachings are not only spiritual. They are practical lessons for living with a calmer and stronger mind. 1. Focus on Your Actions, Not the Result कर्मण्येवाधिकारस्ते मा फलेषु कदाचन॥ Krishna teaches that you only have control over your actions, not over the f...

Maa Kali — Historical vs Spiritual Reality

 1. Was Maa Kali a real person? In strict historical terms , there is no evidence that Maa Kali was a human being who lived on earth like a queen, saint, or tribal leader. She is not a historical figure , but a divine form in Hindu theology. 2. Who is Maa Kali in Hindu belief? Maa Kali is a powerful manifestation of Parvati / Durga , representing: Time (Kaal) — she is beyond creation and destruction Death & transformation — ending ego and illusion Protection — especially of devotees against evil Feminine cosmic power (Shakti) She is often described in texts like: Devi Mahatmya Kalika Purana In these, Kali emerges during battles against demons like Raktabija , symbolizing destruction of uncontrolled desire and ego. 3. Symbolic meaning (this is key) Rather than a person, Maa Kali represents deep psychological and cosmic truths : Her dark color → infinite universe / unknown reality Garland of skulls → passage of time and mortality Standin...

Why Maa Kali Looks Terrifying — Yet Is the Most Compassionate Mother

 At first glance, Maa Kali appears frightening—dark, fierce, with a garland of skulls and blood-red tongue. But in Hindu philosophy, this is not horror—it is deep compassion expressed in a raw, truthful form . 1. She destroys only one thing: your ego Kali’s violence is not against people—it is against: Ego Illusion (Maya) Greed, fear, attachment Think of her like a surgeon , not a destroyer. Surgery looks violent—but it saves life. That’s why she is called the ultimate liberator. 2. The “mother” who does what others won’t Most gods comfort you. Kali transforms you , which is harder. A gentle mother protects. Kali is the mother who prepares you for reality . She: Removes false security Forces truth Breaks what is holding you back This is why devotees in Bengal often say: “Maa is strict, but she never abandons.” 3. Her terrifying symbols decoded Tongue out Not bloodlust Symbolizes shock + humility One story: she steps on Shiva and realizes—sti...

Why Maa Kali Is Especially Powerful in Bengal

Kali is worshipped across India—but in Bengal, she is central, intimate, and deeply embedded in daily life . This is not accidental; it comes from a mix of history, geography, culture, and philosophy . 1. Bengal is the heart of Shakti worship Bengal historically became a stronghold of Shaktism , where the Divine Mother (Shakti) is supreme—not secondary. Key idea: In many regions → God is male-dominant In Bengal → Mother is ultimate reality Kali, being the most intense form of Shakti, naturally became central. 2. Tantra flourished in Bengal Bengal (especially ancient regions like Kamakhya–Bengal belt) was a major center of Tantra . Tantra emphasizes: Direct experience over rituals Breaking fear and social conditioning Accepting all aspects of life (even death and darkness) Kali perfectly embodies Tantra: She is raw, beyond rules She represents confronting reality fully That’s why Tantric practitioners strongly gravitated toward her. 3. Geography shaped...