Saturday, February 14, 2026

Chapter 3.38, Verses 21–40

Yoga Vashishtha 3.38.21–40
(THE HORRORS OF WAR: These verses paint an extremely graphic and repulsive picture of a post-battlefield filled with mutilated corpses, rivers of blood, scavenging animals, wailing survivors, and the final agonies of the dying)

श्रीवसिष्ठ उवाच ।
करीन्द्रशवराश्यग्रविश्रान्ताम्बुदखण्डकम् ।
विशीर्णरथसंघातं वातच्छिन्नमहावनम् ॥ २१ ॥
वहद्रक्तनदीरंहः प्रोह्यमानहयद्विपम्।
शरशक्त्यृष्टिमुसलगदाप्रासासिसंकुलम् ॥ २२ ॥
पर्याणावनसंनाहकवचावृतभूतलम् ।
केतुचामरपट्टौघगुप्तं शवशरीरकम् ॥ २३ ॥
फणास्फुटकतूणीरकुञ्जकूजत्समीरणम् ।
शवराशिपलालौघतल्पसुप्तपिशाचकम् ॥ २४ ॥
मौलिहाराङ्गदद्योतशक्रचापवनावृतम् ।
श्वशृगालकराकृष्टसान्द्रान्त्रादीर्घरज्जुकम् ॥ २५ ॥
रक्तक्षेत्रक्वणत्किंचिच्छेषजीवनृदन्तुरम् ।
रक्तकर्दमनिर्मग्नसजीवनरदर्दुरम् ॥ २६ ॥
वराङ्गकवचप्रख्यनिर्गताक्षिशतोच्चयम् ।
वहद्भुजोरुकाष्ठौघघोररक्तसरिच्छतम् ॥ २७ ॥
साक्रन्दवन्धुवलितं मृतार्धमृतमानवम् ।
शरायुधरथाश्वेभपर्याणासंवरान्तरम् ॥ २८ ॥
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रुदत्क्रन्दत्परिभ्रष्टशवक्षुब्धासृगुद्धति ।
मृतभर्तृगले शस्त्रत्यक्तप्राणकुलाङ्गनम् ॥ ३४॥
सेनोत्क्रान्तततक्षिप्रबहुपान्थपरीक्षणम् ।
शवहारकराकृष्टसप्राणानुचराकुलम् ॥ ३५ ॥
केशशैवालवक्राब्जचक्रावर्तनदीशतम् ।
तरत्तुङ्गतरङ्गाढ्यवहद्रक्तमहानदम् ॥ ३६ ॥
अङ्गलग्नायुधोद्धारव्यग्रार्धमृतमानवम् ।
विदेशमृतसाक्रन्दहुताङ्गगजवाजिनम् ॥ ३७ ॥
प्राणान्तस्मृतपुत्रेष्टमातृदेवपराभिधम् ।
हाहाहीहीतिकथितमर्मच्छेदनवेदनम् ॥ ३८ ॥
म्रियमाणमथौजिष्ठद्विष्टप्रारब्धसंचयम् ।
दन्तियुद्धासमर्थाग्रमृतदेहेष्टदैवतम् ॥ ३९ ॥
म्रियमाणमहावज्ञाशूराश्रितपलायनम् ।
अशङ्कितासृगावर्तभीमास्पदगमोत्सुकम् ॥ ४० ॥

Maharishi Vashishta continued:
3.38.21–28
> Clouds rested on heaps of elephant corpses like fragments, broken chariots scattered everywhere, and great forests torn by winds.
> Rivers of blood flowed swiftly, carrying away horses and elephants, crowded with arrows, spears, lances, clubs, maces, and swords.
> The ground covered with torn saddles, armors, and shields; hidden by banners, chowries, and flags on corpses.
> Quivers split open like snake hoods, arrows whistling in the wind like birds in groves; ghosts slept on beds of piled corpses like straw.
> Necklaces and armlets on heads shining like rainbows; dogs and jackals dragging long intestines like ropes.
> In blood-soaked fields, faint sounds of dying breaths; frogs half-alive sunk in bloody mud.
> Hundreds of eyes protruding like from armor on beautiful bodies; hundreds of terrible blood-rivers from severed arms and thighs.
> Surrounded by weeping relatives; half-dead and fully dead men; filled inside with arrows, weapons, chariots, horses, elephants, and saddles.

3.38.29–33
> The deliberately omitted verses continue the same terrifying description: severed heads rolling like fruits, scattered limbs forming grotesque patterns, vultures and crows feasting, flames from burning pyres mixing with smoke, jackals howling over half-eaten bodies, rivers of marrow and fat flowing together, ornaments torn from corpses glittering amidst the gore, and the entire field resembling the mouth of death itself, swallowing armies whole.

3.38.34–40
> Women crying and wailing, fallen from dead husbands' necks, abandoning weapons and life.
> The army departed quickly, many travelers inspecting; corpse-carriers pulling living followers in crowds.
> Rivers with hair like moss, faces like lotuses in whirlpools; swift, high waves carrying great streams of blood.
> Half-dead men eagerly pulling out stuck weapons; foreigners dead, crying, with sacrificed bodies of elephants and horses.
> At death's end, remembering beloved sons, wives, mothers, gods; cries of "ha ha"  pain from cut vitals.
> Dying men, though despised, clinging to accumulated karma; dying elephant warriors unable to fight, bodies devoted to gods.
> Dying brave men in great contempt, fleeing to refuge; eager to enter fearful whirlpools of unexpected blood fearlessly.

Detailed summary of the teachings:
Sage Vasishta deliberately intensifies the horror (including in the omitted verses 29–33 which describe rolling heads, devoured flesh, burning pyres, and the field as death’s gaping mouth) to shatter any romantic or heroic illusion about war, power, and worldly achievement. The scene demonstrates in the most shocking way possible that everything the ego cherishes—beauty, strength, fame, family, victory—is utterly perishable and ends in this kind of degradation. The teaching is that attachment to the perishable body and its pursuits is the root of endless suffering.

The emotional suffering is shown as even more terrible than the physical: dying warriors remembering loved ones with intense longing, widows collapsing in grief, final cries of pain and despair. This illustrates how deeply the mind is trapped in identification with relationships, desires, and past actions (karma). Even at the moment of death, the individual cannot let go; the momentum of vasanas (latent tendencies) drags Consciousness back into samsara. Vasishta uses this to awaken disgust (bibhatsa rasa) toward sensory life and to turn the seeker's attention away from external objects toward the unchanging Inner Reality.

By refusing to glorify the warriors or the battle, and instead showing brave men reduced to pathetic, clinging, suffering creatures, the text cultivates strong vairagya (dispassion). The deliberate omission and then continuation of gruesome details in verses 29–33 reinforces that no part of the scene is noble or redeemable—everything is equally illusory and painful. This revulsion is a necessary stage for many seekers: only when the world appears thoroughly undesirable does one become ready to inquire seriously into what is truly permanent and blissful.

Underneath the surface teaching of impermanence lies the Advaita pointer: all this apparent carnage—bodies, blood, cries, fire—is nothing but transient appearances in the One Infinite Consciousness (Chit). There is no real death, no real sufferer, no real battlefield; these are mere vibrations or modifications within the Self. The gruesome imagery serves as a dramatic device to make the student (Rama) question the Reality of the entire phenomenal world and to seek the substratum that remains untouched by birth, death, and destruction.

In the larger context of Yoga Vasishta, this extended description of the battlefield is one of the most powerful meditations on death and unreality given to Rama to cure his existential despondency. By confronting the mind with the inevitable end of all ambition and pleasure in such vivid detail, Vasishta forces detachment, self-inquiry, and ultimately recognition of the Self as Pure Awareness, beyond all these transient horrors. Once that Realization dawns, the entire spectacle of samsara loses its grip, and effortless peace prevails.

Friday, February 13, 2026

Chapter 3.38, Verses 1–20

Yoga Vashishtha 3.38.1–20
(These verses vividly describe the horrific and chaotic nature of war, portraying it as a scene of total confusion, darkness, bloodshed, and destruction)

श्रीवसिष्ठ उवाच ।
एवमत्याकुले युद्धे सास्फोटभयसंकुले ।
आदित्ये तमसा वृद्धे चटत्कठिनकङ्कटे ॥ १ ॥
वहत्यम्बूत्पतन्तीषु पतन्तीष्वश्मवृष्टिषु ।
नदीषु क्षेपणाच्छासु वरकेष्वब्जपङ्क्तिषु ॥ २ ॥
मिथः फलाग्रकाटोत्थवह्निसीकरिणीषु च।
आयान्तीषु प्रयान्तीषु दूरं शरनदीषु च ॥ ३ ॥
वहल्लूनशिरःपद्मचक्रावर्तैस्तरङ्गितैः ।
खार्णवे पूरिते हेतिवृन्दमन्दाकिनीगणैः ॥ ४ ॥
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अथसेनाधिनाथाभ्यां विचार्य सहमन्त्रिभिः ।
दूताः परस्परं वृत्ता युद्धं संह्रियतामिति ॥ ८ ॥
तत्र श्रमवशान्मन्दयन्त्रशस्त्रपराक्रमैः।
रणसंहरणं काले सर्वैरेवोररीकृतम् ॥ ९॥
ततो महारथोत्तुङ्गकेतुप्रान्तकृतास्पदम् ।
बलयोरारुहोहैक एको योधो ध्रुवो यथा ॥ १० ॥
सोंऽशुकं भ्रामयामास सर्वदिङ्मण्डले सितम् ।
श्यामेव दीर्घशुद्धांशुं युद्धं संह्रियतामिति ॥ ११ ॥
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विनिर्गन्तुं प्रववृते रणादथ बलद्वयम्।
वारिपूरश्चतुर्दिक्षु प्रलयैकार्णवादिव ॥ १५ ॥
उत्क्षिप्तमन्दरक्षीरसमुद्रवदनाकुलम् ।
सैन्यं प्रशाम्यदावर्तं शनैः साम्यमुपाययौ ॥ १६ ॥
क्रमेणासीन्मुहूर्तेन विकटोदरभीषणम् ।
अगस्त्यपीतार्णववच्छून्यमेव रणाङ्गणम् ॥ १७ ॥
शवसन्ततिसंपूर्णं वहद्रक्तनदाकुलम्।
परिकूजनझङ्कारपूर्णझिल्लिवनोपमम् ॥ १८ ॥
बहद्रक्तसरित्स्रोतस्तरङ्गारवघर्घरम् ।
साक्रन्दार्धमृताहूतसप्राणव्यग्रमानवम् ॥ १९ ॥
मृतार्धमृतदेहौघसृतासृक्प्लुतनिर्झरम् ।
सजीवनरपृष्ठस्थशवस्पन्दनभ्रान्तिदम् ॥ २० ॥

Maharishi Vashishtha continued: 
3.38.1–4
> In this extremely chaotic battle, filled with bursting fear and confusion, the sun was darkened by increasing darkness, and hard armors were clashing loudly.
> Rivers of water were flowing and falling, showers of stones were descending, rivers were being thrown by catapults, and rows of excellent lotuses were present.
> Mutual sparks from the tips of weapons produced fire-like drops, and arrow-rivers were coming and going far away.
> The sky-ocean was filled with swirling currents of severed heads like lotuses, and groups of weapons flowing like the Mandakini river.

3.38.8–11
> Then, the two army commanders, after discussing with their ministers, sent messengers to each other saying, "Let the war be stopped."
> Due to fatigue, with slowed chariots, weapons, and strength, everyone agreed to halt the battle at that time.
> Then, a great warrior, standing high with flags on his chariot, rose alone between the two armies like a fixed pole star.
> He waved his white cloth in all directions, like a dark cloud with long pure rays, signaling that the battle should stop.

3.38.15–20
> After that, both armies began to leave the battlefield, like floods of water spreading in all four directions from a single deluge ocean.
> The army, lifted up like the milky ocean churned by Mandara, gradually calmed its whirlpools and slowly attained peace.
> In a moment, the terrible battlefield, once fearsome with huge bellies, became empty like the ocean drunk by Agastya.
> It was filled with rows of corpses, troubled by flowing rivers of blood, resembling a forest of crickets full of humming and buzzing sounds.
> It had great rivers of blood with roaring waves, cries of the half-dead calling out, and agitated people still alive.
> Streams overflowed with blood from heaps of dead and half-dead bodies, and the trembling of corpses with residual life on the backs of living people created illusions of movement.

Detailed summary of the teachings:
The battlefield is compared to an ocean filled with weapons, severed heads, and flowing blood, emphasizing how violence creates an illusion of overwhelming Reality. This serves as a powerful metaphor in Yoga Vasishta for the illusory (maya) nature of the world—sensory experiences and conflicts appear intensely real but are ultimately transient and dream-like.

The turning point comes when both sides, exhausted by the strain on their bodies, weapons, and minds, decide through messengers to cease fighting. This highlights a key teaching: even in the midst of fierce duality and opposition, wisdom and reflection (vichara) can arise, leading to cessation of conflict. It shows that prolonged struggle drains vitality, making peace a natural outcome when fatigue reveals the futility of continued violence.

A single warrior stands as a symbol of calm authority amid the chaos, waving a white cloth to signal truce, like a steady light in darkness. This illustrates the role of inner clarity or a higher perspective (like the pole star) that can bring resolution. In the text's Advaita framework, it points to the unchanging Self that remains untouched by the turmoil of perceived battles between ego-forces.

The armies depart, and the battlefield empties slowly, like an ocean receding or being swallowed up. This process teaches impermanence—grandeur and terror vanish quickly, leaving emptiness. It underscores that all phenomena, including war's horrors, arise and subside in consciousness, without inherent substance.

Finally, the deserted field remains filled with corpses, blood rivers, cries, and eerie movements of half-dead bodies. This gruesome aftermath reinforces the central teaching of Yoga Vasishta: worldly existence is like a dream or nightmare of birth, death, and suffering. True liberation comes from recognizing this as illusion, turning inward to realize the eternal, peaceful Self beyond all such transient spectacles.

Thursday, February 12, 2026

Chapter 3.37, Verses 21–59

Yoga Vashishtha 3.37.21–59
(These verses describe a fierce and chaotic battle scene in vivid, poetic detail, narrated by Sage Vasishta)

श्रीवसिष्ठ उवाच ।
भुशुण्डीमण्डलोद्द्योतश्यामार्कोत्पातभीरुषु ।
आभीरेष्वरयः पेतुर्गोगणा हरितेष्विव ॥ २१ ॥
कान्तकाञ्चनकान्तासीत्ताम्रसंग्रामवाहिनी ।
भुक्ता गौडभटेनाङ्ग नखकेशनिकर्षणैः ॥ २२ ॥
रणे नगनयासंख्यकवच्चक्रनिकृन्तनैः।
तङ्गणाः कणशः कीर्णाः कङ्कगृध्रेषुभासकैः ॥ २३ ॥
लगुडालोडनोड्डीनं गौडं गुडुगुडारवम्।
श्रुत्वा गान्धारगावोऽग्रे दुद्रुवुर्द्रविडा इव ॥ २४ ॥
आकाशगार्णवप्रख्यो वहच्छककदम्बकः ।
अकरोत्पारसीकानां घननैशतमोभ्रमम् ॥ २५ ॥
मन्दराहननोड्डीनस्वच्छक्षीरार्णवोदरे ।
वनानीवायुधान्यासञ्छत्रुप्रालेयसानुनि ॥ २६ ॥
यदम्बुदैरिवोड्डीनं शस्त्रवृन्दैर्नभोङ्गणे ।
तद्दृष्टं वीचिवलनैर्लोलैः प्लुतमिवार्णवे ॥ २७ ॥
शतचन्द्रं सितच्छत्रैः शरैः शलभनिर्भरम्।
शक्तिभिः किल नीरन्ध्रं दृष्टमाकाशकाननम् ॥ २८ ॥
वीरासवसमाक्रन्दकारिणः केकयैः कृताः।
कङ्कैः कङ्ककुलाक्रान्तव्योमोद्धूलितमस्तकाः ॥ २९ ॥
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ननर्दुर्नन्दनोद्यानसुन्दर्यो मत्तयौवनाः।
वनोपवनदेशेषु मेरोर्वीरवराश्रिताः ॥ ५०॥
तावत्तारारवं रेजे सैन्यकाननमुत्तमम् ।
यावन्न परपक्षेण प्राप्तं कल्पानलार्चिषा ॥ ५१ ॥
छिन्नाः पिशाचसंयुक्ता भूतापहृतहेतयः।
पातयित्वा ययुः कर्णान्दशार्णास्तर्णका इव ॥ ५२ ॥
जहुर्भग्नेश्वराः कान्ति तां जिगीषवनौजसा ।
कासयः कमलानीव शुष्कस्रोतस्विनौजसा ॥ ५३ ॥
तुषाका मेसलैः कीर्णाः शरशक्त्यसिमुद्गरैः ।
विद्रुता नरकैः क्षिप्ताः कटकच्छलना अपि ॥ ५४ ॥
कौन्तक्षेत्राः प्रस्थवासैः स्थित्वा योधिभिरावृताः ।
गुणा इव खलाक्रान्ता गता व्यक्तमशक्तताम् ॥ ५५ ॥
द्विपयो बाहुधानानां क्षणेनादाय मस्तकम् ।
भल्लैः पलाय्याशु गता विलूनकमला इव ॥ ५६ ॥
मिथः सारस्वता नीत्वा आदिनान्तं कृताजयः ।
पण्डिता इव वादेषु नोद्विग्ना न पराजिताः ॥ ५७ ॥
खर्वगाः खदिताः क्षुद्रा यातुधानैः परावृताः ।
तेजः परममाजग्मुः शान्ताग्नय इवेन्धनैः ॥ ५८ ॥
कियदाख्यायत एतज्जिह्वानिचयैः किलालमाकुलितः ।
वासुकिरपि वर्णयितुं न समर्थो रणवरं राम ॥ ५९ ॥

Maharishi Vashishta continued:
3.37.21–29
> In the tribes of Abhiras, who were terrified by the dark sun-like calamity rising from Bhushundi's circle, enemies fell like herds of cows among green fields.
> The army with beautiful golden luster and coppery weapons in battle was enjoyed (devoured) by the Gauda warriors, O dear one, by tearing nails and hair.
> In the battle, the Tanganas were scattered into pieces by countless mountain-like wheels cutting them, and by herons, vultures, and arrows shining like them.
> Hearing the Gaudas making a rumbling sound like drums while being beaten with clubs and flying up, the Gandhara cows (soldiers) fled ahead like Dravidas.
> The sky-like ocean of moving Shakas created a thick darkness of night illusion for the Parsikas.
> Like clear milky oceans flying up from the beating of Mandara, the armies appeared like forests of weapons on snowy mountain peaks of enemies covered with frost.
> The sky arena seemed flooded like an ocean with waving waves when weapons rose like clouds.
> The sky forest appeared with a hundred moons from white umbrellas, full of locust-like arrows, and densely covered without gaps by shaktis (spears).
> The Kekayas, makers of cries like drinking heroic liquor, had their heads dusted and covered by vultures and kanka birds.

3.37.30–49
> These omitted verses describe the fighting and valour of many more such tribes' and kingdoms' armies.

3.37.50–59
> The beautiful young women of Nandanavana, intoxicated with youth, roared joyfully in the groves and forests on Meru where brave heroes rested.
> Then the excellent army forest shone with star-like sounds until the enemy's side did not reach it with the flames of kalpa fire.
> Cut down, joined with ghosts, weapons stolen by spirits, the Dasharnas fell like young deer after ears were cut.
> The broken lords abandoned their desired beauty with force like lotuses in dry rivers abandoning their charm.
> The Tushakas were scattered by Mesalas with arrows, spears, swords, hammers; fleeing, thrown into hell, even the camp deceivers.
> The Kauntas, standing with Prastha residents surrounded by warriors, went to clear weakness like qualities overtaken by the wicked.
> The elephants of those with arms carrying burdens quickly took heads with broad arrows and fled swiftly like lotuses cut off.
> The Sarasvatas, taking each other to the end of beginning, victorious like scholars in debates, neither agitated nor defeated.
> The short and mean Kharvagas, eaten and surrounded by demons, attained supreme splendor like peaceful fires with fuel.
> How much can be described of this battle? Even Vasuki, his tongue exhausted and mouth filled with heaps, is not capable of describing this excellent war, O Rama.

Detailed summary of the teachings:
These verses portray the horrifying and illusory nature of worldly battles and conflicts, emphasizing how even grand wars, filled with valor, noise, and destruction, are ultimately transient and dream-like. Sage Vasishta uses extreme poetic imagery of armies clashing, bodies falling, weapons flying, and soldiers fleeing to illustrate the impermanence of physical power and victory. The graphic descriptions serve to highlight that what appears as heroic or terrifying is merely a play of the mind, much like scenes in a dream where everything arises and dissolves without lasting substance. This vivid battle narrative is not for glorifying war but to show its futility and the suffering it causes, urging the seeker to look beyond such spectacles.

The teaching underscores the non-dualistic philosophy of Advaita: all phenomena, including wars between tribes, nations, or forces, are appearances in Consciousness, lacking independent Reality. Different groups (Abhiras, Gaudas, Tanganas, Shakas, Parsikas, etc.) symbolize the fragmented ego and divisions created by ignorance (avidya). Their fierce struggles and eventual defeat reflect how the ego's pursuits lead to self-destruction. Vasishta reminds Rama that such cosmic or historical battles are projections of the mind, similar to how the entire Universe is a dream of Brahm, teaching detachment from identification with the body, victory, or defeat.

A deeper lesson lies in the inevitability of change and decay shown through metaphors like scattered pieces, fleeing armies, broken lotuses, and extinguished fires. These images convey that no power, beauty, or glory endures; everything is subject to dissolution. This realization helps cultivate vairagya (dispassion), as clinging to worldly achievements or fears only prolongs bondage. The battle's chaos mirrors the inner turmoil of uncontrolled desires and attachments, encouraging self-inquiry to transcend them.

The verses also subtly point to the futility of describing Ultimate Reality or the Supreme Truth through words, as seen in the final verse where even Vasuki (the cosmic serpent) cannot fully narrate the war's magnitude. This illustrates the limitations of language and intellect in capturing the infinite, reinforcing that True Knowledge comes from direct Realization rather than intellectual analysis or narration. It directs the aspirant toward silence, meditation, and inner stillness beyond verbal descriptions.

Overall, these verses teach that the world of action, conflict, and multiplicity is maya (illusion), and true liberation lies in recognizing the self as unchanging witness-consciousness untouched by these events. By contemplating the transient and dream-like quality of even the most intense experiences, one awakens to the peaceful, Eternal Reality, free from birth, death, and all dualities.

Wednesday, February 11, 2026

Chapter 3.37, Verses 1–20

Yoga Vashishtha 3.37.1–20
(These verses form part of Sage Vasishta's narration in the story of Queen Lila, where he describes a massive illusory war to illustrate the dream-like nature of the world)

श्रीवसिष्ठ उवाच ।
रणे रभसनिर्लूननरवारणदारुणे ।
अहंपूर्वमहंपूर्वमिति वृन्दानुपातिनि ॥ १॥
एते चान्ये च बहवस्तत्र भस्मत्वमागताः।
प्रविशन्तः प्रयत्नेन शलभा इव पावके ॥ २ ॥
अत्रान्ये मध्यदेशीया जना नोदाहृता मया ।
तानिमाञ्छृणु वक्ष्यामि पक्षाँल्लीलामहीभृतः ॥ ३ ॥
तद्देहिकाः शूरसेना गुडा अश्वघनायकाः।
उत्तमज्योतिभद्राणि मदमध्यमिकादयः ॥ ४ ॥
सालूकाकोद्यमालास्या दौज्ञेयाः पिप्पलायनाः ।
माण्डव्याः पाण्डुनगराः सौग्रीवाद्या गुरुग्रहाः ॥ ५ ॥
>>>
दशार्णाः पाशनिर्मुक्तश्रृङ्खला जालभीरवः ।
निलीना रक्तजम्बाले वैतसास्तिमयो यथा ॥ १८ ॥
गुर्जरानीकनाशेन गुर्जरीकेशलुञ्चनम् ।
विहितं तङ्गणोत्तुङ्गनासिशङ्कुशतै रणे ॥ १९ ॥
सिषिचुः शस्त्रकर्णौघाद्विन्दुभ्यो निगडा गुहान् ।
शरधारावनानीव वीरहेतिप्रभाम्बुदाः ॥ २० ॥

Maharishi Vashishta said:
3.37.1–5
> In the fierce battle where many men and elephants were swiftly cut down, crowds rushed forward shouting "I first! I first!"
> Many others there, along with these, turned to ashes. They entered the fight eagerly, like moths rushing into fire.
> Here, I have not yet described the people from the middle region. Listen to these now—I will tell you about the armies on Lila's side of the earth.
> Her brave forces included Shurasena, Guda, leaders of Ashvaghana, Uttamajyoti, Bhadra, Madhyamika, and others.
> There were also Saluka, Kodyamala, Daujneya, Pippalayana, Mandavya, Pandunagara, Saugriava, and other great planetary forces.

3.37.6–17
> Continuing the list of armies and warriors from various regions, the verses describe more groups entering the battle.

3.37.18–20
> The Dasharnas, freed from chains and shackles, the fearful ones in nets, hid in red mud like cane reeds submerged in water.
> With the destruction of the Gurjara army, the Gurjari women had their hair pulled in the battle by hundreds of sharp, towering Tangana swords and spears.
> From the showers of weapons and arrows, chains and shackles poured into caves like clouds of heroic weapons raining streams in the forest.

Detailed Summary of the Teachings:
The fierce battle scene, with armies clashing, warriors shouting to claim priority in attack, and soldiers rushing to death like moths to flame, symbolizes how ego-driven actions and desires lead beings into destruction. The repeated cries of "I first!" highlight the illusion of individuality and competition in samsara (worldly existence), where the sense of separate self fuels conflict and suffering.

The detailed listing of armies from different regions—representing diverse peoples, tribes, and forces—shows the vast multiplicity of the manifested world. All these warriors, despite their bravery, strength, and numbers, ultimately meet the same fate: turning to ashes or falling in battle. This teaches that no matter how grand or varied the appearances of life seem, everything in the phenomenal world is transient and perishable. The world is a projection of Consciousness, and its events, including wars, are unreal appearances like dreams.

The imagery of soldiers entering battle eagerly yet perishing quickly compares them to moths drawn to fire, emphasizing ignorance (avidya) and attachment that pull beings toward destruction. The "fire" represents the consuming power of Time, death, or the illusion itself. Vasishta uses this to point out that without Self-Knowledge, living beings repeatedly engage in futile struggles driven by ego and desire, leading only to ruin.

Descriptions of hidden warriors in mud, destruction of armies, and violent acts like pulling hair or raining weapons illustrate the chaos and horror of worldly conflicts. These vivid details serve to make the unreality of the world more evident—such intense suffering and violence arise only in the dream-state of ignorance. The teaching urges turning away from external battles toward Inner Realization, as true victory lies not in conquering others but in transcending the illusion of separateness.

Overall, these verses reinforce the core Advaita teaching of Yoga Vasishta: the entire universe, including its wars and heroes, is a mental creation (kalpana) with no Ultimate Reality. By contemplating the impermanence and dream-like quality of such events, the seeker develops detachment (vairagya) and discrimination (viveka). This leads to recognition of the Self as the Unchanging Witness beyond all phenomena, bringing liberation (moksha) from the cycle of birth, death, and illusory strife.

Tuesday, February 10, 2026

Chapter 3.36, Verses 21–67

Yoga Vashishtha 3.36.21–67
(These verses in the context of Queen Lila's story, list the kings and their countries or regions that came to join the assembly in support of King Padma aka Viduratha in some contexts, during a great war preparation)

श्रीवसिष्ठ उवाच ।
मध्यदेशादिसंख्याने प्राग्दिभ्योऽभ्यागतानिमान् ।
लीलानाथस्य पद्मस्य पक्षे जनपदाञ्छृणु ॥ २१ ॥
पूर्वस्यां कोसलाः काशिमागधा मिथिलोत्कलाः ।
मेखलाः कर्करा मुद्रास्तथा संग्रामशौण्डकाः ॥ २२ ॥
मुख्या हिमा रुद्रमुख्यास्ताम्रलिप्तास्तथैव च ।
प्राग्ज्योतिषा वाजिमुखा अम्बष्ठाः पुरुषादकाः ॥ २३ ॥
वर्णकोष्ठाः सविश्वोत्रा आममीनाशनास्तथा ।
व्याघ्रवक्राः किराताश्च सौवीरा एकपादकाः ॥ २४ ॥
माल्यवान्नाम शैलोऽत्र शिविराञ्जन एव च ।
वृषलध्वजपद्माद्यास्तथोदयकरोगिरिः ॥ २५ ॥ >>>
केडवस्ताः सिंहपुत्रास्तथा वामनतां गताः ।
सावाकच्चापलवहाः कामिरा दरदास्तथा ॥ ६५ ॥
अभिसासदजार्वाकाः पलोलकुविकौतुकाः ।
किरातायामुपाताश्च दीनाः स्वर्णमही ततः ॥ ६६ ॥
देवस्थलोपवनभूस्तदनूदितश्रीर्विश्वावसोस्तदनु मन्दिरमुत्तमं च ।
कैलासभूस्तदनु मञ्जुवनश्च शैलो विद्याधरामरविमानसमानभूमिः ॥ ६७॥

Maharishi Vashishta continued:
3.36.21–25
> Listen to the kings and peoples from eastern directions and other regions who came to the side of King Padma and King Lila's husband.
> From the east: Kosalas, Kasis, Magadhas, Mithilas, Utkalas, Mekhalas, Karkaras, Mudras, and also Sangrama-shaundakas.
> Mukhyas, Himas, Rudramukhyas, Tamraliptas, and similarly Pragjyotishas, Vajimukhas, Ambashthas, Purushadakas.
> Varnakoshtas along with Savishvotras, Amaminashanas, Vyaghra-vakras, Kiratas, Sauviras, and Ekapadakas.
> Here is the mountain Malyavan, also Shiviranjana, Vrishaladhwaja, Padma and others, and the mountain Udayakara.

> The list continuing through the middle verses with various tribes, peoples, and mountain regions like Kedavas who became like lion-sons and attained dwarf forms, Savakacchapalavahas, Kamiras, Daradas...

3.36.65–67
> Kedavas, those lion-sons, and those who attained dwarf stature; Savakacchapalavahas, Kamiras, Daradas.
> Abhisasadajarvakas, Palola-kuvikautukas, Kiratas who came from far, the poor ones, then Swarnamahi.
> Divine places, garden lands, then the glory spoken of, Vishvavasu's excellent temple next, then Kailasa land, then Manjuvana mountain, a place equal to the grounds of Vidyadharas and divine aerial chariots of Gods.

Detailed summary of the teachings:
These verses form part of the Lila episode in Yoga Vasishta, where Sage Vasishta describes a vast assembly of kings, warriors, and peoples from different directions of ancient Bharatavarsha and beyond who gathered around King Padma (the husband in Lila's world). 
The long enumeration of names highlights the immense diversity of regions, tribes, and terrains—from eastern kingdoms like Kosala and Magadha to mountainous and frontier peoples like Kiratas and Daradas. This list is not mere geography; it symbolizes the infinite variety and multiplicity of the manifested world (samsara), showing how countless beings and forms appear within the dream-like creation of Consciousness.

The teaching underscores the illusory nature of the external world. Just as Queen Lila sees this grand gathering in her husband's realm through yogic vision granted by Saraswati, all these kings, mountains, and peoples exist only as projections in the mind. The detailed naming emphasizes that what seems solid and diverse—nations, warriors, landscapes—is nothing but temporary appearances in the infinite consciousness (chit), like images in a dream. Nothing is ultimately real or permanent outside the self.

A deeper lesson is about the power of perception and desire. King Padma's world expands to include all these allies because of his past karma, valor, and the mind's creative force. Lila's journey reveals that worlds arise and dissolve based on individual consciousness and sankalpa (willful resolve). The inclusion of both civilized kingdoms and wild tribes shows no hierarchy in illusion—all are equally transient modifications of the one reality.

These verses also point toward detachment (vairagya). By listing so many entities that come and serve the king only to later face war, death, and dissolution in the story, Vasishta illustrates the futility of worldly attachments, power, and alliances. True liberation comes from recognizing the non-dual self beyond these appearances, as Lila eventually does by transcending her limited identity.

Ultimately, the passage teaches the non-difference between the individual and the universal. The assembly of diverse peoples mirrors the countless thoughts and forms in the mind, all arising from and subsiding into pure awareness. Through this vision, the seeker understands that the entire cosmos—from Kailasa to distant tribes—is a play (lila) of Consciousness, leading to the Realization of one's True Boundless Nature.

Monday, February 9, 2026

Chapter 3.36, Verses 11–20

Yoga Vashishtha 3.36.11–20
(These verses form part of a vivid description likely in the context of a great battle or cosmic illusion of armies, often symbolic in the text's philosophical framework)

श्रीवसिष्ठ उवाच ।
मिलिताश्चक्रिणश्चक्रैर्धनुर्धारैर्धनुर्धराः ।
खङ्गिभिः खङ्गयोद्धारो भुशुण्डीभिर्भुशुण्डयः ॥ ११ ॥
मुसलैर्मुसलोदाराः कुन्तिनः कुन्तिधारिभिः ।
ऋष्ट्यायुधा ऋष्टिधरैः प्रासिभिः प्रासपाणयः ॥ १२ ॥
समुद्गरा मुद्गरिभिः सगदैर्विलसद्गदाः।
शाक्तिकैः शक्तियोद्धारः शूलैः शूलविशारदाः ॥ १३ ॥
प्रासासनविदः प्रासैः परशूक्ताः परश्वधैः ।
लकुटोद्यैर्लकुटिनश्चोपलैरुपलायुधाः ॥ १४ ॥
पाशिभिः पाशधारिण्यः शङ्कुभिः शङ्कुधारिणः ।
क्षुरिकाभिस्तु क्षुरिका भिन्दिपालैश्च तद्गताः ॥ १५ ॥
वज्रमुष्टिधरा वज्रैरङ्कुशैरङ्कुशोद्धताः।
हलैर्हलनिकाषज्ञास्त्रिशूलैश्च त्रिशूलिनः ॥ १६ ॥
श्रृङ्खलाजालिनो जालैः श्रृङ्खलैरलिकोमलैः ।
क्षुभिताकल्पविक्षुब्धसागरोर्मिघटा इव ॥ १७ ॥
क्षुब्धचक्रदलावर्तः शरसीकरमारुतः।
प्रभ्रमद्धेतिमकरो व्योमैकार्णव आबभौ ॥ १८ ॥
उत्फुल्लायुधकल्लोलशिराकुलजलेचरः ।
रोदोरन्ध्रसमुद्रोऽसौ बभूवामरदुस्तरः ॥ १९ ॥
दिव्याष्टकजनानीकं पक्षद्वयतया तया।
अर्धेनार्धेन कुपितं भूपालाभ्यां तथा स्थितम् ॥ २० ॥

Maharishi Vashishta continued:
3.36.11–15
> Warriors with discuses gathered with those carrying discuses; archers with bow-bearers; swordsmen with sword-wielders; and those with bhushundi weapons with bhushundi carriers.
> Mace-wielders with those holding heavy maces; spear-fighters with spear-bearers; those armed with risti weapons with risti holders; and prasa users with those carrying prasa spears.
> Hammer-fighters with those wielding mudgaras; warriors with shining maces with mace-bearers; shakti fighters with shakti wielders; and experts with tridents with trident masters.
> Those skilled in prasa weapons with prasa holders; axe-fighters with parashu wielders; club-wielders with those holding lakutas; and stone-throwers with those using stones as weapons.
> Noose-wielders with those carrying pashas; spike-bearers with shanku holders; razor-like ksura users with ksura fighters; and those with bhindipala weapons with similar carriers.

3.36.16–20
> Vajra-fist holders with vajra weapons; those excited with ankushas with ankusha wielders; plow experts with halas; and trident-bearers with trishula holders.
> Those entangled in chain networks with nets and soft chains; they appeared like agitated clusters of ocean waves stirred by stormy winds.
> The sky looked like a single ocean with swirling discus whirlpools, arrow showers like raindrops, and circling weapon-crocodiles.
> It became a terrible ocean of weapons with rising waves of raised arms, full of moving creatures in the form of soldiers, impossible even for gods to cross.
> The Divine army of eight divisions stood divided into two sides, half angry on one part and half on the other, positioned against the two kings.

Detailed summary of the teachings:
These verses poetically depict the massive assembly of warriors from two opposing armies, each group matched with specific weapons and fighters, creating an overwhelming spectacle of military might. The detailed listing of weapons (discuses, bows, swords, maces, spears, tridents, nooses, vajras, chains, and more) emphasizes the diversity and ferocity of human conflict. In the broader philosophy of Yoga Vasishta, such vivid portrayals of armies and battles serve not as literal history but as metaphors for the chaos and multiplicity within the mind's illusions (maya). The world of duality—opposing forces, kings, and divisions—mirrors the apparent divisions in consciousness that fuel suffering and bondage.

The imagery escalates to compare the battlefield to a turbulent ocean: swirling whirlpools from discuses, arrow-showers like rain, weapons circling like sea creatures, and waves of raised arms. This oceanic metaphor teaches that the phenomenal world, filled with endless activity and strife, is as transient and illusory as stormy waves on the surface of the sea. Beneath the apparent turmoil lies the calm, unified Reality of Pure Consciousness (Brahm). The text uses this to illustrate how the ego perceives separation and conflict where none truly exists in the absolute sense, urging the seeker to look beyond surface phenomena.

The description culminates in the sky appearing as an impassable ocean, terrifying even to gods, highlighting the overwhelming power of illusion when one is caught in it. Yet, this terror is self-created through identification with the body, weapons, and sides. The teaching here is that what seems invincible and dreadful in the relative world loses its grip once the illusory nature of all forms is realized. Liberation comes from recognizing that these "armies" of thoughts, desires, and dualities are mere appearances in the mind, without independent Reality.

Verse 20 explicitly shows the army divided into two hostile halves, aligned against two kings, symbolizing the fundamental duality (dvaita) that characterizes samsara. 
One side is depicted as angered, underscoring how passion, anger, and opposition arise from ignorance of unity. The Yoga Vasishta repeatedly teaches that such divisions are projections of the mind; True Peace arises when one transcends pairs of opposites and abides in non-dual awareness.

Overall, these verses reinforce the core teaching of the text: the entire manifested world, including grand battles and cosmic spectacles, is a dream-like projection of Consciousness. By contemplating such descriptions, the aspirant is guided to detach from identification with the perishable forms and actions, turning inward to the Unchanging Self. This leads to freedom from fear, conflict, and rebirth, as the apparent ocean of samsara dissolves into the serene ocean of Pure Being.

Sunday, February 8, 2026

Chapter 3.36, Verses 1–10

Yoga Vashishtha 3.36.1–10
(These verses paint a vivid, terrifying picture of a massive battlefield during intense war, showing complete chaos and destruction)

श्रीवसिष्ठ उवाच ।
अथ श्रृङ्गोपमानेषु स्थितेषु शरराशिषु।
सर्वभीरुषु भग्नेषु विद्रुतेषु दिशो दश ॥ १ ॥
मातङ्गशवशैलेषु विश्रान्ताम्बुदपङ्कतिषु ।
यक्षरक्षःपिशाचेषु क्रीडत्सु रुधिरार्णवे ॥ २ ॥
महतां धर्मनिष्ठानां शीलौजःसत्त्वशालिनाम् ।
शुद्धानां कुलपद्मानां वीराणामनिवर्तिनाम् ॥ ३ ॥
द्वन्द्वयुद्धानि जातानि मेघानामिव गर्जताम् ।
मिथोनिगरणोत्कानि मिलन्त्यापगपूरवत् ॥ ४ ॥
पञ्जरः पञ्जरेणेव गजौघेन गजोच्चयः।
सवनः सवनेनाद्रिरद्रिणेवामिलद्वलात् ॥ ५॥
अश्वौघो मिलदश्वानां वृन्देनाराविरंहसा ।
तरङ्गौघेन घोषेण तरङ्गौघ इवार्णवे ॥ ६ ॥
नरानीकं नरानीकः समायुधमयोधयत्।
वेण्वोघमिव वेण्वोघो मरुल्लोलो मरुद्वलम् ॥ ७ ॥
रथौघश्च रथौघेन निष्पिपेषाखिलं वपुः।
नगरं नगरेणेव दैवेनोड्डीनमासुरम् ॥ ८॥
सरच्छरभरासाररचितापूर्ववारिदम् ।
युयुधे स्थगिताकाशा धनुर्धरपताकिनी ॥ ९ ॥
विषमायुधयुद्धेषु योद्धारः पेलवाशयाः ।
यदा युक्त्या पलायन्ते रणकल्पानले तदा ॥ १० ॥

Maharishi Vashishta said:
3.36.1–5
> Then, when the peaks like mountains stood covered with heaps of arrows, all the fearful ones broke and fled in all ten directions.
> Among the elephant corpses like mountains, clouds of dust rested, and yakshas, rakshasas, and pishachas played in the ocean of blood.
> Among the great ones devoted to dharma, strong in character, power, and courage, pure like lotuses of noble families, brave warriors who never turned back...
> ...pair duels arose, roaring like clouds, eager to swallow each other, merging like floods of rivers.
> Cage met cage, mass of elephants met mass of elephants, forest met forest, mountain met mountain with great force.

3.36.6–10
> Mass of horses met mass of horses with loud noise and speed, like waves meeting waves in the ocean with roar.
> Army of men met army of men, fighting with weapons, like clusters of bamboos meeting clusters of bamboos in wind-driven waves.
> Mass of chariots crushed everything with mass of chariots, like a city crushed by a city, or as if demons flew up by Divine will.
> The army with flags and archers, creating an unprecedented cloud of arrows like rain, fought with sky blocked.
> In battles with terrible weapons, when the weak-hearted warriors, seeing the fire-like fury of war, cleverly fled.

Detailed Summary of the Teachings:
The scene begins with arrows covering everything like mountains, causing fear and flight among the weak. Corpses of elephants form hills, dust settles like clouds, and supernatural beings play in rivers of blood. This imagery highlights the horror and futility of worldly violence, where even mighty creatures fall and the earth becomes a graveyard soaked in gore. In the Yoga Vasishta's philosophy, such descriptions serve to show the illusory and painful nature of samsara (worldly existence), urging the seeker to look beyond transient battles.

The focus then shifts to the noble warriors—those firm in dharma, pure in lineage, brave, and resolute—who engage without retreat. Their duels are compared to roaring clouds or merging floods, emphasizing how even the virtuous get drawn into destructive conflicts. This teaches that attachment to duty, honor, or righteousness can still trap one in the cycle of action and suffering. The text uses these heroic figures to illustrate that true strength lies not in physical valor but in transcending ego-driven struggles, as even the best can become part of the destructive play of maya.

The repeated similes of mass against mass (elephants, horses, chariots, armies, waves, mountains, forests) stress the impersonal, mechanical nature of war. Forces collide without individuality, crushing everything in their path. This reflects the Advaita teaching that multiplicity and opposition are unreal; all is one Consciousness appearing as conflict. The battlefield becomes a metaphor for the mind's internal wars—desires clashing with duties, fears with courage—showing how identification with the body and ego leads to endless friction and pain.

The description of chariots crushing bodies and skies blocked by arrow-rain evokes total annihilation, where even Nature and Space seem overwhelmed. Yet, the final verse reveals a key insight: when the war's fury becomes unbearable, even warriors with weak minds cleverly flee. This points to the wisdom of detachment—recognizing the futility of fighting illusory battles and choosing escape through understanding rather than cowardice. In Yoga Vasishta, running from such delusion is not weakness but the first step toward liberation, as Rama is guided to see all phenomena as dream-like.

Overall, these verses teach the impermanence and suffering inherent in worldly engagements, especially violent ones. They contrast the apparent glory of brave warriors with the grim reality of destruction, encouraging discernment (viveka) to see the world as unreal. The ultimate message is to turn inward, Realize the Self beyond birth and death, and attain Peace free from the cycles of action and reaction. War here symbolizes all dualistic struggles; true victory comes from transcending them through Knowledge of the non-dual Brahm.

Chapter 3.40, Verses 55–64

Yoga Vashishtha 3.40.55–64 (These verses emphasize the infinite and transient nature of manifested beings and worlds within the vast expanse...