Showing posts with label Ardhanarishvara. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ardhanarishvara. Show all posts

Sunday, 3 March 2019

THE POTENTIAL AND THE SPARK



Of the little that I can presume to know about Shiva, one representation has always intrigued me. It is the androgynous form, more popularly known as the Ardhanarishvara.

On the auspicious occasion of Shivaratri, I would love to start my blogging journey by explaining my understanding of the significance of this unique deity – not the religious legends but how it reflects the futuristic, scientific nature of the Indian school of thought.

Among its numerous interpretations, the word ‘shiva’ can also be split into three parts:

Sha - shareeram (body)
Ee - eeshwari (life-giving/creative force)
Va - vayu (motion)

Shiva is, therefore, body that has life and motion. Reinforcing this, we can simply remove the ee when shiva becomes shava or body without life and motion. Shiva is thus life, and in an extended understanding, all-embracing universal consciousness and potential.

Now let’s ponder over what sparks this potential, the source that causes it to spring into life. What turns the magnificent abstinent yogi into the householder – the supreme force of creation, procreation, and re-creation?

The answer is Shakti. We may call her Parvati, Devi, or Uma.

When Shiva and Shakti unite, we see Srishti, or creation.

The Ardha-Nari represents this idea perfectly.

From the Westerners, we have learnt that there is a woman behind every successful man. Ancient Indian wisdom, however, has given the woman a position of equality. Shakti doesn’t hide in Shiva’s shadow propelling him to glory. She stands shoulder to shoulder with him as his complement, saha dharmini. Joined indivisibly, Shiva is Shakti and Shakti is Shiva.

The idea of the two entwined entities giving life is also evident in the double-helical structure of the DNA! It’s notable that a child inherits 50% of DNA from each parent. And have some of us not seen childless couples praying to stone tablets embossed with double-helical snakes enshrined under trees in many regions of India?

Another interesting fact about the deity is that most representations show Shiva on the right and Shakti on the left. Some sects believe this is because the right ‘dominates’ the left and the male principle is depicted as more powerful. It may not be so. It may be a simple representation of human biology.

Scientifically, we know the right brain controls the left side of the body and vice-versa. Those who practice yoga know that breathing through the left (Chandra Nadi) slows metabolism, soothing and cooling the body – calm implying the female. Conversely, breathing through the right (Surya Nadi) increases pranic/physical energy and produces heat - activity implying the male. Scientific studies have also proven that a female brain is equally stimulated on both sides while processing information but the right side is more active in men in similar contexts. On the left also resides the heart! In sum, the so-called female qualities are contained on the left and the male qualities on the right, and they are ultimately equal and interdependent.

Thus, whether you follow the Shaiva tradition when Parvati merges with Shiva, making the basically male god, half female; or follow the Shakta tradition when the female god divides into two halves, the end result is the same. The all-pervasive God – Ardha-Nari - representing the seamless union of the dual forces of the universe - the ascetic, passive, quintessentially masculine Shiva (Purusha) and the homely, active, supremely feminine Parvati (Prakriti). One is the foundation, the other the spring. Without their union, there is no creation, no growth.

Going beyond the gender connotations, it is only when an individual – woman or man- discovers and nurtures within herself/himself both the heart and the brain, compassion and action, the subtle and the elemental, the soul and the body can she/he hope to evolve into a complete human being. In our social structure too, it is the harmonizing of these apparently contrasting principles and values that can bring balance.

It is unfortunate that the patriarchal forces of today’s ‘progressive’ civilizations have relegated the Ardha-Nari to merely an iconography in Shiva temples. There are only a few temples where this deity is worshipped. The real strengths of the female principle are now seen as undesirable ‘weaknesses.’ No wonder, therefore, that most of our social evils and personal discontentment stem from this lack of balance between the fundamental energies of nature that were meant to reside in unison both within and outside us.

On this day, today, let’s go back to what our ancestors taught us – find the totality in the duality. Let’s all nurture the Shiva and the Shakti within us and extend it to the world around us.


Tuesday, 12 February 2019

Sweet Pongal Recipe

It is the tradition in India to offer sweets to God before starting any new venture.  Thus, in keeping with the tradition, I started this blog with an appreciation of my motherland followed by an article on Sun God for Rathasaptami.  Today  being Rathasaptami, following the south Indian tradition to offer pongal to Sun God, I am herein putting up my first recipe, Sweet Pongal, an offering to Sun God on Rathasaptami.

Traditionally, Pongal is cooked in the community in an earthen pot on an open fire and takes hours to cook.  I am bringing you a modernised pressure cooker version of the recipe.






Ingredients:

Fine Rice 1 cup
Moong Dal (yellow petite lentils)1/2 cup
Grated Jaggery 1 cup
Cloves  4 (optional to balance the sweetness; can use a small pinch of salt instead)
Cardamom 4 (peeled and crushed)
Dry fruits for garnishing.
Ghee 5 tablespoons (can cut down to 1 tablespoon according to taste and health preferences)

Time:

Preparation time 5 minutes, cooking time 20 min approx.  Serves 4.

Procedure in Detail:
Dry roast the rice and moong dal separately in a pan.  Wash and drain the rice and dal together.

In a pressure pan, bring to boil 5 cups of water.  Add the rice and dal mixture to the water, cover and cook on low flame for two or even three whistles of the cooker.

In the meanwhile, add half a cup of water to the grated jaggery in a saucepan and heat it till the jaggery dissolves.  Do not boil it.  Will become syrupy.

Once the cooker has cooled down, check the consistency of the rice.  It should have a thick and porridgy consistency.  If it is thicker, add hot water and bring to boil.  Then add the jaggery water and boil for another 5 minutes.  The final consistency of the Pongal should be thick and porridgy.  Transfer to a serving bowl.

For the seasoning, heat ghee in a pan, splutter the cardamom and cloves, add in the dry fruits and roast them till golden brown.  Pour sizzling hot on the cooked pongal.

Tastes best served hot.

Tips:

1.  If you are health/calorie conscious, you can substitute the fine rice with millet, brown rice, oats or quinoa.  If you are using brown rice, dry roast and soak for at least an hour before cooking.
2.  If you would rather use a microwave oven instead of a pressure cooker, set the rice, dal and water mixture in the oven at high for 10 minutes and check the consistency in the end.  Add in grated jaggery/jaggery powder after cooking and set in oven for another 5 minutes.
3.  The consistency of Pongal will largely depend on the rice used.  Basmati will not cook to a soft consistency.  Select rice that cooks to soft consistency; e.g., sona masouri or kolam.