I was against “Murtipooja” or “Idol worship”.
Why do people go to a famous temple, stand in que for day n night just to get a glimpse of a particular stone? What is the difference between that stone and any other ordinary stone?
I grew up with such questions in my mind and no one could offer me an answer that made sense to my logical mind. Then I came to know that...
🧵1.
there is something known as ‘consecration’. Now what’s that? It is like this, if you transform mud into food, we call this agriculture. If you make food into flesh and bone, we call this digestion, integration. If you make flesh into mud, we call this cremation. If you can make this flesh or even a stone or an empty space into a divine possibility, that is called consecration.
2.
Today, modern science is telling us that everything is the same energy manifesting itself in a million different ways. If that is so, what we call as divine, what we call a stone, what we call a man or a woman, what we call a demon, are all the same energy functioning in different ways.
For example, the same electricity becomes light, sound and so many other things, depending upon the technology. So, it is just a question of technology. If you have the necessary technology, you can make the simple space around you into a divine exuberance, you can just take a piece of rock and make it into a god or a goddess -this is the phenomenon of consecration.
3.
Have you heard of Agastya Muni? He was one of the Saptrishis who was sent to South India by Shiva – the Adiyogi, or the first yogi. He consecrated every human habitation south of the Deccan Plateau in some form and made sure that a live spiritual process was on. He did not spare a single human habitation.
4.
Agastya muni went to the extent of saying that when the world truly goes off the track because of development and knowledge, when knowledge becomes poison, when what should be good for you becomes negative for you, his work would rise and act. Now when I visit any ancient temple, I enter that space with a sense of humility. That something truly magnificent, something beyond my current level of understanding exists here.🙇♀️🙏
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Today's total lunar eclipse (visible from India) falls on Purnima and marks the start of Pitru Paksha, adding layers of ritual significance.
"During lunar eclipses, what would happen in 28 days over a full lunar cycle is happening in a subtle way over the course of two to three hours of the eclipse. In terms of energy, the earth’s energy is mistaking this eclipse as a full cycle of the moon.
Certain things happen in the planet where anything that has moved away from its natural condition will deteriorate very fast. This is why while there is no change in raw fruits and vegetables, there is a distinct change in the way cooked food is before and after the eclipse.
1.
If there is food in your body, in two hours’ time your energies will age by approximately twenty-eight days. Does that mean you can eat a raw food diet on such a day? No, because the moment food goes into your body, the juices in your stomach attack and kill it. It becomes like semi-cooked food and will still have the same impact. This subtle shift can cause dullness, sleepiness—even a symbolic “death” of awareness.
2.
The cycles of the moon have an impact upon the human system, physically, psychologically and energy-wise. This is evident in the way our mothers went through their cycles. I am talking about our mothers because we are here only because our mothers were in tune with the moon. If our mothers’ bodies were not in tune with the moon we wouldn’t be here today. When the moon is going through a whole cycle in two to three hours’ time, there is a little bit of confusion in all our mothers’ bodies. This is also happening in a man’s body, because your mothers are present in a certain way – not physiologically but in other ways."- Sadhguru
3.
🧵 The Blind King Who Aimed by Sound: A Rajput Tale of Honour and Defiance 1. Prithviraj Chauhan, the proud Rajput king of Delhi and Ajmer, faced Muhammad Ghori, the ambitious invader from Afghanistan.
One fought for dharma. The other, for dominion.
2. The year was 1191. The First Battle of Tarain.
Ghori’s forces charged. But Prithviraj’s Rajput warriors stood like mountains.
Ghori was wounded. Captured.
And then… released.
Why?
Because Rajput honour whispered: “We do not strike the fallen.”
3. Ghori returned the next year—stronger, smarter, ruthless.
The Second Battle of Tarain in 1192 was brutal.
Prithviraj was defeated. Taken prisoner.
And then… blinded with hot iron rods.
🐻✨ Do you remember the wise old bear Jambavan, who fought alongside Rama in the Ramayana?
Here's the story of how his daughter, Jambavati, became the eighth wife of Krishna...
🧵1.
Long ago, in the golden age of Dwaraka, there existed a jewel so radiant it seemed to carry the sun’s own breath. This was the Syamantaka, a divine gem gifted by Surya, the sun god, to his devotee Satrajit. It wasn’t just beautiful—it was miraculous. Wherever it rested, it produced gold daily, and its glow was said to ward off misfortune.
2.
Satrajit refused to share the jewel with the kingdom, despite Krishna’s gentle request to place it in the royal treasury for the good of all. Soon after, the jewel vanished. Rumors spread like wildfire. Whispers turned into accusations. And Krishna—beloved, wise, divine—was blamed.
3.
🧵“Why do we offer Naivedyam to God—when He doesn’t eat it?” A thread inspired by my 7-year-old’s honest question. 🍚✨ 1/ “Aai, God doesn’t eat the food. We eat it. Then why do we offer it to Him first? Isn’t it just drama?”
He asked this while watching me place payasam before the deity this Janmashtami.
I smiled. Because this question had once bothered me in my childhood.
2/ But explaining the reason to a 7 yr old was not easy. I tried to keep it very simple.
I told him:
“It’s not about feeding God. It’s about remembering where everything comes from.”
Naivedyam is our way of saying thank you—for the rice, the milk, the fire, the breath.
3/ It’s a gesture of love and reverence, where the devotee prepares food with purity of mind and intention, often without tasting it beforehand—a mark of restraint and respect.
🧵 The Mango Tree That Wouldn’t Bloom — A Story of Kartikeya’s Patience 1/ In a quiet forest, Kartikeya once planted a mango seed. 🥭
He whispered to it:
The seed listened. And slept.
2/ Days passed. Then weeks. Then years.
The tree grew tall—but never bloomed.
No flowers. No fruit. Just leaves and silence. 🌳
The forest teased:
3/ Kartikeya didn’t get angry.
He sat beneath the tree every morning.
He sang to it. Told it stories.
He even shared his victories with it.
🥥 What’s Happening with Coconut Prices in Kerala?
📈 Current Prices
Coconut oil: Prices have surged from ₹160/litre last year to ₹500–₹770/litre..
Raw coconuts: individual coconuts costing ₹70–₹77 each😳😱
1.📒
For a middle class this is nothing less than a calamity. but even hard times become easy to bear if we give it a touch of humor☺️, isn't it?
Here's a story of a Malayali🌴family...
Characters:
Raghavan – Retired schoolteacher, proud Malayali, coconut oil purist.
Leela – His sharp-witted wife, master of improvisation.
Appu – Their son, software engineer, home for Onam.
2.
🌴 Scene: A modest kitchen in Kochi, 7:00 AM
Raghavan (sniffing the air suspiciously):
“Leela… this sambar smells like betrayal. Did you use sunflower oil?”
Leela (without turning):
“Not betrayal, Raghava. It’s called survival. ₹700 for coconut oil? I’d rather fry my morals.”
Raghavan (dramatically clutching his chest):
“Sunflower oil in sambar is like wearing sneakers to a temple. Functional, but disrespectful!”
Appu (scrolling his phone):
“Amma’s right. Even Flipkart has EMI options for coconut oil now.”
Raghavan:
“Next they’ll offer cashback for buying coconuts. What’s the world coming to?”
3.