Indian mythology is full of beautiful fables and interesting tales. Now they have very mystical meanings if we analyze them, interpret them as per the higher laws of the bigger dimension defined by high vibrational frequencies. I always wondered why do they depict Shiva with a naga, mostly a black cobra, around his neck. My individual interpretation is something on the following lines.
A
snake is one of the most perceptible creatures on earth. Their entire body is
in a position to perceive things to a level that is almost impossible to even
imagine for we human beings. For example, suppose there is a snake in its hole
and there is an earthquake thousands of kilometers away. Now there is a high
possibility that the snake will perceive the tremors because it is so sensitive
to even the softest reverberations coming across its body.
We
humans have almost a primal fear when it comes to snakes. Just think of a snake
and you get goose-bumps. When we come across a snake it can perceive the fear
in us. It can perceive and feel the change in our blood chemistry because when we
get excited or get fearful, our blood chemistry changes and the breathing
pattern also turns abnormal. Now a snake is so perceptive and sensitive as to
feel the slightest disturbance in the vibrational frequency and chemical change
in anyone or anything around. Even if we don’t show any outer sign of being
afraid, but are scared inside, it can perceive the biological or chemical
changes in our bloodstream. It then reacts to that fear.
It
is commonly believed that wherever there are meditating spiritualists the
snakes really like their company. Maybe they feel comfortable among those
higher energies emanating from the yogis. I have read stories about meditating
ascetics in the forests and as their mind goes into that state of equilibrium,
that equanimity of temperament, that balance of mind and the consequent
lessening of fear, a snake (especially a cobra) really likes those waves of
higher frequency.
In
the neighboring village there was a realized soul, Narayan Maharaj. He left his
body about twenty-five years ago, but people accepted him as an enlightened
human being. He arrived in this area as a young wandering ascetic. He used to
meditate in a little scrub forest in the countryside. In his memoirs he has
clearly written that when he would meditate there was a black cobra that would
continue moving in a circle around him and that continued for at least five or six
years. So it proves that a cobra has a special liking for those who are
spiritually evolved or who are on the path of spiritual evolution because there
are certain biological changes as a result of the spiritual practices, which
create a kind of divine atmosphere where there is no fear, where the snake
loses its instinct of fear and biting. In this divine little space around the
meditating yogi, in the spools of unqualified love, he tells us that he saw
opposites melting and getting unified at certain nights—a snake and a mongoose
playing like children; a little fox and a fearsome wolf playing on the grass
nearby where he had set up his asana.
I think
the reason they show a naga around
Shiva’s neck is that Shiva being a realized soul, a supreme being who was hundred percent established
within himself, so there was no fear and the snake would find him just like a
warm rock during cold winter days, where it could relax since there was no
fear, no change in that great yogi’s blood chemistry or emotions or thoughts or energy field. As
established as a rock he was. A live rock! So a snake would be near lord Shiva
the way it would prefer to crawl on a rock. According to me, the main purpose
they show Shiva with a naga is that
he was a supreme personality that was hundred percent realized and established like
an unmovable rock within his human body; there was no turbulence either in his
emotions or in his body or in his energy field and a snake would be so
comfortable around his neck as it would be relaxed on a rock during harsh
winter days in order to soak the warm sunrays. The adiyogi established his chitta
in all forms, to be like a living rock, a supreme fluidity inside a supreme
stability. And with someone so blissful why won’t a naga fall in love. It abandoned its fears and biting instincts. And
there we have our beautiful Shiva with a naga
around his neck.
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