As we ascend into the mountains, the terrain gets tougher revealing the undulating landscape as we scale mountain sides as well as touch down towards the shores of the river Mandakini. There is prosperity to be found every where. The hills are green with life, oozing with clear water springs that just wash the roads as they flow down to the river. The river is crystal clear racing through bed rock that are eroded and white while the gigantic hills tower around us on both sides making us appear like dots in this panoramic landscape.
With the wind against us as the car swerved along the precipice, we got sudden glimpses of the Chaukhamba peaks, one of the most extra ordinary, in the mountain range that rose majestically in front of us. At first, Chaukhamba can really make anyone's heart stop a beat, skip a breath and leave us gaping at it as if we had the glimpse of Lord Shiva himself! And then the desire to want to keep looking at this peak covers the soul so strong that the eyes hungrily search the landscape to have another glimpse as the car turns into a bend in the mountains.
And yet there is something more about this peak that makes me want to bow to it in all humility because it is not just all this, it is really Lord Shiva himself. Chaukhamba appears like a trishul at first glimpse. The staggering imagery of the trishul rises, making its slopes feel sharp and dangerously steep. It is overwhelming to feel like a dot in this picturesque landscape where the Lord's presence is felt by the glow of the sunlight on the over powering snow capped peak that echoes the form of the symbolic trishul on itself. At this point, the mind doesnt ask questions, the heart simply melts thanking the Lord for revealing his secretive form somewhere and somehow in this blessed land.
And then it gets clearer. The Lord himself appears in the mind's eye as I close my eyes and meditate on this range. Chaukhamba, as the name suggests is the four headed peak. It echoes an uncanny resemblance with Chatura Mukha linga form of Lord Shiva. In this extra ordinary landscape, every foothill leads the way to this great shrine, this natural shrine that is larger than life, larger than any temple constructed by man, larger that anything imagined yet. This is the overpowering presence of Lord Shiva, in his aniconic form always present, always alive, always shining and waiting to be recognized. How wonderful and fulfilling this experience is, how completely fruitful, to wish and see the presence of the Lord, not just in man made temples, but everywhere, in everything, in every piece of natural art that this earth has presented us.
O Chaukhamba,
I bow to this great mountain
That makes my heart beat faster
That makes me want to imbibe it
That makes me prostrate in all humility
That makes me break down into tears
That blesses me and this landscape
With its magnificent beauty
Proclaiming the silent presence
The symbol of Lord Shiva himself
So silently embedded in its being.
Photo courtesy: Picasa > Agasthya
6 comments:
Beautiful account of a beautiful place. The pictures are mindblowing. Natural wonders never cease to amaze.
Yes, Kavitha, "beauty lies in the eye of the beholder". Even if it is right there in front of our eyes, such as the Eagle shaped North America (understood as 'Garud' the vhicle of Vishnu), (Shiva's vehicle, Nandi's) Bull's head shaped Australia in the World Atlas, 'we' generally take it for granted and not as a hint from the Supreme Soul, which the ancient 'Hindus' apparently didn't miss!
ROFL - this one is really ridiculous... there are hundred visual mappings which you can do to any given complex imagery and say that there is a logical connect .
Yes, everything in the entire complex universe is ridiculous because it's only a make believe world, Maya/ illusion to the ancient wise. Maybe, some extra terresrial, extra intelligent life first needs to explain who at teh first place, billions of years ago perhaps, provided body clocks and capacity to experience dreams even in 'inferior' animals, and not only in humans, who relatively are more egoistic...
At least in the present day west, 'scientists' have realised human brain as a super analogous computer (while man in the present is obliged to use relatively inferior digital computers), and looking at the complicated chemical structure, life on earth to be the result of design by an 'intelligent being'...and even the 'most intelligent being' today is able to tap only a negligible percentage of brain cells...
And the ancient 'Hindus' believed in man as a model of the universe...
Even the famous astronomer Stephen Hawking, a patient of ALS (Amyotrophic Lateral Scelerosis), virtually invalid and 'luckily' alive, expressed the desire to 'enter the mind of God' when he visted 'India'...
It is a matter of 'realisation'...Words fail to differentiate between the sweetness of, say, banana and mango. "The taste of the pudding lies in eating"...
One needs to explain 'natural' existence of ESP, or 'intution', in certain characters where no logic works...
"Hari anant/ Hari katha ananta..."
Happy Mahashivaratri to all!
Thinking aloud, 'I' would like to remind 'myself' - on this holy day - that the ancient 'Hindus' believed all 'wrong doings' to accrue from 'lack of overall knowledge'. And, therefore, they advised 'siddhi',ie, acquiring all round knowledge, or expertise in all subjects, basically through realisation (of essence, 'Sat', ie, 'Truth')...But, on the other hand, today we also know that, due to 'lack of time', in this ever changing dynamic universe, one human life span is insufficient to even read what all material, from different sources (even just blogs!), is available on just one subject of specialisation - leave aside attaining expertise in it...although some human agency might confer on one the degree of 'doctorate', honorary or otherwise, or, say, the 'Nobel Peace Prize', for instance...
Human life was perhaps wisely generalised by some poet in the line, to the effect, "Childhood gets spent in games/ Youth in performing foolish acts / And, Old Age in repentance"...
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