There's something to be said for Kitchen Table Wisdom - you know, like in the old days when people sat around the kitchen table after a meal and talked about life, the universe and the meaning of it all - as well as the gossip doing the rounds in town...

Well, that's what this place is - a place to share common wisdom, thoughts and feelings about things important and unimportant, that bring us joy, laughter and happiness and that trouble, sadden, confuse and anger us ...

What I write here is what's 'real' for me. It won't always be PC or 'nice'. We're missing out on true connection and chances to grow and change because there's too little authenticity, too little honesty, too much holding back what we really feel and mean.

Welcome to my world...

I used to have a copyright claim here, but I've removed it...

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they come to those who are receptive and are to be used for the well being of all...

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and I use them to accent/expand on my thoughts and understandings...


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Thank You


As You Think, So It Is - Your Beliefs Create Your Reality

If your Reality isn't Working for You, Create a New One!

Life Unlimited!


Namaste

(the Divine in me, recognises and honours the Divine in you)

Sahila




Tuesday, November 15, 2011

Kali Rising...

...in the world without and the world within...

Kali: The Dark Mother

fearful goddess

with a heart of a mother

 


The love between the Divine Mother and her human children is a unique relationship.   

Kali, the Dark Mother, is one such deity with whom devotees have a very loving and intimate bond, in spite of her fearful appearance.

In this relationship, the worshipper becomes a child and Kali assumes the form of the ever-caring mother.
"O Mother, even a dullard becomes a poet who meditates upon thee raimented with space, three-eyed, creatrix of the three worlds, whose waist is beautiful with a girdle made of numbers of dead men's arms..."  
- From a Karpuradistotra hymn, translated from Sanskrit by Sir John Woodroffe

 

Who is Kali?

Kali is the fearful and ferocious form of the mother goddess.  She assumed the form of a powerful goddess and became popular with the composition of the Devi Mahatmya, a text of the 5th - 6th century AD. 

Here she is depicted as having born from the brow of Goddess Durga during one of her battles with the evil forces.

As the legend goes, in the battle, Kali was so much involved in the killing spree that she got carried away and began destroying everything in sight.

To stop her, Lord Shiva threw himself under her feet.   Shocked at this sight, Kali stuck out her tongue in astonishment, and put an end to her homicidal rampage.

Hence the common image of Kali shows her in her mêlée mood, standing with one foot on Shiva's chest, with her enormous tongue stuck out.

 

The Fearful Symmetry

Kali is represented with perhaps the fiercest features amongst all the world's deities.   

She has four arms, with a sword in one hand and the head of a demon in another.   The other two hands bless her worshippers, and say, "fear not"!

She has two dead heads for her earrings, a string of skulls as necklace, and a girdle made of human hands as her clothing.   

Her tongue protrudes from her mouth, her eyes are red, and her face and breasts are sullied with blood.   

She stands with one foot on the thigh, and another on the chest of her husband, Shiva.

Awesome Symbols!

Kali's fierce form is strewed with awesome symbols.   Her black complexion symbolizes her all-embracing and transcendental nature.   Says the Mahanirvana Tantra: "Just as all colors disappear in black, so all names and forms disappear in her".   

Her nudity is primeval, fundamental, and transparent like Nature — the earth, sea, and sky.   Kali is free from the illusory covering, for she is beyond the all maya or "false consciousness."   

Kali's garland of fifty human heads that stands for the fifty letters in the Sanskrit alphabet, symbolizes infinite knowledge.

Her girdle of severed human hands signifies work and liberation from the cycle of karma. 

Her white teeth show her inner purity, and her red lolling tongue indicates her omnivorous nature — "her indiscriminate enjoyment of all the world's 'flavors'." 

Her sword is the destroyer of false consciousness and the eight bonds that bind us.

Her three eyes represent past, present, and future, — the three modes of time — an attribute that lies in the very name Kali ('Kala' in Sanskrit means time). The eminent translator of Tantrik texts, Sir John Woodroffe in Garland of Letters, writes, "Kali is so called because She devours Kala (Time) and then resumes Her own dark formlessness."

Kali's proximity to cremation grounds where the five elements or "Pancha Mahabhuta" come together, and all worldly attachments are absolved, again point to the cycle of birth and death. 

The reclined Shiva lying prostrate under the feet of Kali suggests that without the power of Kali (Shakti), Shiva is inert.

Forms, Temples and Devotees

Kali's guises and names are diverse. Shyama, Adya Ma, Tara Ma and Dakshina Kalika, Chamundi are popular forms. Then there is Bhadra Kali, who is gentle, Shyamashana Kali, who lives only in the cremation ground, and so on.

The most notable Kali temples are in Eastern India - Dakshineshwar and Kalighat in Kolkata (Calcutta) and Kamakhya in Assam, a seat of tantrik practices.  

Ramakrishna Paramhamsa, Swami Vivekananda, Vamakhyapa, and Ramprasad are some of the legendary devotees of Kali.  One thing was common to these saints - all of them loved the goddess as intimately as they loved their own mother.

"My child, you need not know much in order to please Me.
Only Love Me dearly.
Speak to me, as you would talk to your mother,
if she had taken you in her arms."



I had a very personal experience with Kali, many years ago when I was training to be a workshop facilitator for Women 4 Women (W4W) in Australia...

It was one of the most intense experiences of my life... It felt like I was losing my mind... and what it came down to, in the end, was accepting the Kali energy in my own being... stopping fighting her, denying her; honouring and accepting her while at the same time setting the boundary that I would make a conscious decision as to when and how I would allow her energy to manifest in my choices and actions...

I realise now that this past ten years' journey with my son's father has been one long saga in recognising, owning, integrating and using the power of the goddess Kali as she is embodied within me... 

Time to own my power and get real...



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