Mahashivratri – the great night or light of Lord Shiva
Hello All, firstly happy
Shivratri or should I say wishing you light through Shiva’s Blessings. Being an
ardent devotee of Shiva, I was just pondering few days back as to how to
celebrate the favourite day of my favourite deity Shiva. First, I thought I’d
fast which I have done on Mondays (Lord Shiva’s favourite day in the week). Of
course, most devotees stay awake the whole night which I have never been able
to do; though I have tried various methods!! I was wondering why I had such
poor ‘self-control’ in staying awake and how do I make this Shivratri special.
Then, I heard an inner voice which told me to celebrate Shivratri for its 'true
meaning'. This is totally my take and really hope I don’t hurt the sentiments of
anyone.
‘Shivratri’
means the great night of Shiva, where in one chants, meditates and tunes up to
Shiva energy; thereby, dispelling darkness through enlightenment via Shiva. So,
then doesn’t it mean that we don’t just worship Shiva but try to understand the
true significance of the rituals, and emulate Shiva Himself? Therefore, keeping awake is symbolic
of the kind of awareness, mental purity and oneness of purpose needed to reach
the goal- ‘Shiva’. For the spiritual aspirant, Lord Shiva is the Supreme
Consciousness that illuminates the three states of waking, dreaming and deep sleep.
The dawning of the fourth state, ‘turiya’ is consonant with the awakening of
the individual.
Now, we all know Lord Shiva is the God
who destroys among the Holy Trinity. So what exactly would we want Shiva to ‘destroy’
in our life? Obviously darkness and that would be anger, greed, hatred,
attachments and the infinite negatives! We have to ‘let-go’ of the old in order
to allow the new and divine energy. Many fear Lord
Shiva’s destructive capacity, and yet it is destruction for the purpose of
regeneration. Without death, life cannot begin anew. So, praying to Shiva or
chanting his name is beseeching him to enlighten us. The 5 lettered Shiv mantra
‘Om Namah Shivay’ means ‘I bow to Shiva’. Chanting this mantra is supposedly beneficial
for many ailments and bestows sense of peace too. Shiva principle descends 25
times more today, and hence it is even more auspicious to chant on Shivratri.
Also, happened to read that, “the ‘m’ added to ‘namashivaya-m’ activates the right brain, the part of
the brain that stores memories in images only and the connection to the Divine
immediately happens. The Right inspiration will happen as per the words”- Naran,
healing by meditation blog.
I
remember, when in school i used to think that those who have managed to stay
awake the whole night on Shivratri – even if it was watching movies, playing
cards and similar means had successfully brought in divine blessings.
Thankfully (after ages!) I’ve realized that ‘night’ is a metaphor for darkness’,
not necessarily day-night circle. Now, I
seek divine blessings not just by chanting the Shiv mantra; but also by making
the conscious decision to work from ‘soul-consciousness’ and not ‘ego
consciousness’, which is going to be a colossal task! Yet, why worry when my
Shiva is with me to guide me lovingly and at times joltingly; to ensure I’m
progressing on the path. What more can a spiritual seeker ask for?!
Coming back to my decision of
celebrating Mahashivratri for its true meaning. No sooner had the day begun and
like a divine sign I was experiencing immense peace, centeredness and bliss (despite
the usual annoyances one encounters); almost like being told that ‘I’m on track’.
This wonderful energy inspired me to write this piece and share it with those
interested. And then, as those on my FB list saw, the true meaning of my name ‘Chaitanya’
was shown to me today on a Shiva site; the meaning being ‘Divine Consciousness’.
The day has come with such divine blessings that it has me in a space of
gratitude and loving energy. And I’m yet to go to the temple, or Shiva might
come to me in some way. Like the time, when my sister and me returned without
getting a glimpse of Lord Shiva on Shivratri due to the long queue! We came
back disappointed and I went to bed with the last thought of ‘didn’t get to see
Shiva on Shivratri’, and I dreamt of Lord Shiva (the same as the first picture).
Of course, it was interpreted in million ways- subconscious conjecturing the
image (which by the way I haven’t seen at all- not this Shiva deity/temple).
Some even said ‘Shiva was angry as I didn’t go inside’. Well, I liked this last
version ‘your sincere wish was what mattered and Shiva gave you darshan’. I
woke up feeling great and that is what finally matters! The intention is far
more important than the ritual or how you perform it!! And, our ‘Bholenath’
wants only our love and surrender, which is why it is so easy to appease or
worship Him.
There are many myths associated
to this festival too, but the one where in Lord Shiva drinks poison for the
well-being of the world speaks volumes about this journey of ‘light-darkness’.
Just as Shiva drinks poison to ensure nectar emerges, we will on many occasions
have to drink poison (tough situations, people etc), and trust that surely
after the churning, nectar will emerge for our good. Yes, it’s difficult and
much easier to run away but that will not help in the long run! Faith that ‘nectar’
will be rewarded after the ‘poison or test’ is paramount. Else we will tend to
get bitter or keep running and face the same tests till we conquer it. So why
not surrender to ‘Shiva’ and allow the guidance to flow through. And soon guidance
comes from within us, as that is where Shiva dwells; we only have to recognise and
listen to it!
Hence, the festival of Shivratri
encourages us to deal with 'wars within ourselves'- between ego and soul, poison
and nectar, fear and love. Let us connect to our ‘Shiva’ to seek mental purity,
clarity and divine consciousness (yes, now im in love with this term!). Sounding
narcisstic nah but little self-love is permitted. It is also ‘letting go’ of
the past and forgiving ourselves as much as others. One cannot grow by being
hard and punishing self for past grievances. It’s essential to accept, work on
mistakes, let it go and love oneself, just as Lord Shiva forgives our mistakes
and lovingly blesses us. Recently came across this lovely exercise titled ‘homework
for the soul’- coincidence that one finds what one is seeking- I choose to call
it Divine Timing, and readiness of the person to listen to one’s soul and
watch out for the signs. “Go into the bathroom. Look
at yourself in the mirror. Apologize for hurting this person all these years.
Be specific. Forgive yourself for hurting this person all these
years. Don't lie. Tell the person looking at you that you love them.
Mean it. If you didn't cry, you did it wrong.”- Unknown Author!
As this person aptly sums, “Mahashivaratri is thus not only a ritual but
also a cosmic definition of the Hindu universe. It dispels ignorance, emanates
the light of knowledge, makes one aware of the universe, ushers in the spring
after the cold and dry winter, and invokes the supreme power to take cognizance
of the beings that were created by Him” – unknown author!
Our ultimate aim ought to be to move from ‘Om Namah Shivay’ to ‘Shivohum –
I’m Shiva Consciousness, and that would happen when the ego is fully removed
and there is only Shiva Energy! Not sure where all my thoughts have
transgressed but think it relates to Shiva and related aspects. Hoping the article has thrown
some light about this wondrous day. I know its a hard journey conquering the
ego but it has to start & what better day than on Shiva’s favourite Day!
Wishing us all a ‘happy transition journey’ on this auspicious day of
Mahashivratri- ‘Namah Shivayam’ :)