Charity begins at home...self-love is the seed of the overall tree of love that grows to cover the surroundings...self-love is the source light of all that can be seen beyond all the darkness. But there is a very subtle, thin line between self-love and selfishness. The latter might even impersonate as the former. But we have to understand, self-love is born of joy. It's something positive in nature. It's a high frequency emotion. The other is born of our fears and insecurities. It carries a low frequency. This is basically a contraction, a primal instinct for self-preservation. Self-love is expansion, evolution. In strictly material terms, they might appear the same numbers. But they are antipodal, like 1 and -- 1, 2 and -- 2. They move on the opposite directions on the axis. One sulks and sucks, the other smiles and expands. But at the operational level, it’s a very thin line. One has to be very careful because it's so natural to enter to the other side, the zone of negativity. And constant awareness and continuous asking the self about the difference between self-love and selfishness will do the task.
The posts on this blog deal with common people who try to stand proud in front of their own conscience. The rest of the life's tale naturally follows from this point. It's intended to be a joy-maker, helping the reader to see the beauty underlying everyone and everything. Copyright © Sandeep Dahiya. All Rights Reserved for all posts on this blog. No part of this blog may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means without permission in writing from the author of this blog.
About Me
- Sufi
- Hi, this is somebody who has taken the quieter by-lane to be happy. The hustle and bustle of the big, booming main street was too intimidating. Passing through the quieter by-lane I intend to reach a solitary path, laid out just for me, to reach my destiny, to be happy primarily, and enjoy the fruits of being happy. (www.sandeepdahiya.com)
Monday, September 25, 2023
Saturday, September 23, 2023
A layman's skirmish with Kundalini Shakti
This sharing is something deeply
personal in nature, at the level of experience, in the domain of experiential knowledge.
I’m not sure how many of the readers will relate to it. Still, its mere
theoretical reading will make it interesting. This much I’m sure. It lies in
the domain of spirituality and all the seekers have their individualistic
experiences. There comes a time when one feels like sharing them with others
after the initial years of closely guarding the secret as if it’s a treasure.
There is no specific reason behind guarding the experience initially and there
is hardly any reason for sharing it later. These things happen of their own,
mere happenings.
All of us are essentially spiritual
beings carrying lesser or more worldly baggage. The latter is merely a fuel for
the journey in this lifetime, an accumulation born of our karmic balance from
the journey so far. There is no fundamental flaw in carrying one’s own unique
worldly baggage. But there is a temptation to take the fuel as the main thing,
the essential component of life, while it’s mere fuel and is supposed to get
burnt in the form of karmic dissipation, taking us to further destinations in a
bigger dimension of perception and consciousness.
The theme of this discussion is
Kundalini. I’m sure most of you must have some theoretical knowledge about this
much fabled thing. Kundalini is an auxiliary dimension, a seed of potential,
lying dormant in our psychosomatic system. It’s a short-cut, a gateway, a portal,
a trigger point for speeding up of the evolutionary process of consciousness.
Of course, just like any other short-cut it has its risks, dangers,
possibilities, rewards, agonies, ecstasies, everything in fact.
The fundamental law of cosmos is
primarily pure potentiality. Kundalini is a seed of that potentiality in the
human physiognomy. It is a trigger point to unleash a sudden current of energy
to take your consciousness to a level where it would have taken several
lifetimes in the natural sequence of karmic resolution to help one solve all
the entanglements and their resultant pain and suffering.
There is a set of controllables
and uncontrollables in one’s life. I tried my level best to succeed in normal
worldly terms like anyone around. But the set of uncontrollables at a level of
existence beyond my efforts would always push me back to the starting point.
Naturally that gives one a lot of pain and agony. One questions the basics that
operate the world around him or her. And before you realize you are seeking
solace and answers to your burning questions in a spiritual dimension after
having failed to solve the puzzle in the normal thoroughfare of life.
I never had a guide in physical
form on the teasing and testing field of spirituality. Based on my understanding
of things I went into pilgrimages, bhakti of various deities and yogic
practices. I was crazy about one particular yogic posture. It involved
hammering the base chakra, muladhara,
with relentless force. This chakra is the seat of the pure energy potential
named Kundalini, which isn’t otherwise needed to live a normal happy life and
that’s why most of us are born with it in its sleeping state. As I would
realize later, this particular yoga amounted to forcibly prodding the sleeping
coiled energy—the serpent—at its seat of rest. And the snake rose. The energy
moved. It shook the world that was related to me involving body, relationships,
career, family, emotions, thoughts, everything that had the slightest bearing
on my current identity. That’s why they say that it’s a living death—you die to
your former self in this lifetime only. But for that there is a lot of
examination one has to cross through.
My organic structure wasn’t
prepared for this sudden onslaught. Imagine a thousand watt current suddenly
let loose across a normal 240 watt wire. What would happen? It will heat it up,
there will be sparks, and it may even burn. Similarly, human system is for
normal flow of energy. The organs are adapted to a normal operation of energy,
most of it getting pleasantly getting dissipated in our sweet-sour pursuits and
just a fraction going up to activate of our neurons which define the conscious
part of our mind, the thinking mind.
The hyper current gave me many
nightmares which manifested at many levels—thoughts, emotions, body,
relationships, finance, carrier, family. It ruffles you forcefully, taking a
tight grip on you, as if shaking you out of your slumber at lower levels of
awareness. Literally it left me in a dark night of the soul. It was a karmic
leap, a jump into the unknown. I was all alone to fend the onslaught for
myself. If there were hidden forces supporting me I wasn’t aware of it. But in
effect it was the toughest phase of my life. There was so much of agony, pain,
fear and phobia to make life almost unlivable. I was running all around to
clutch at any straw for salvation. I went on pilgrimages, roamed all alone in
forests, went to ashrams, fell at the feet of holy men—all this just to save
myself from getting sucked into a void. Religious differentials melted.
Spiritual solace was welcome from any corner. I would enter a gurudwara, mandir, masjid, church, Buddhist monastery with the same reverence
and faith. Anything as long as it would save me from darkness. I tried to be an
unquestioning bhakt of many deities.
I tried and tested yoga, pranayama, mantra sadhna,
fasting, anything that was suggested to my dizzying mind. The blizzard of
energy was making me dance to its tunes as if I was merely a lifeless puppet.
The force of energy was seeking newer and newer avenues to hurl its fury into.
Then about six or seven years
back I started worshipping Lord Hanuman with full fervency. I kept Tuesday fast
and read Hanuman chalisa from a booklet because I couldn’t chant it from
memory. I had never memorized it fully. At that time I was visiting Osho’s
Murthal ashram where Sadhguru Osho Shailendra—Bhagwan Osho’s real brother—gave mala
diksha and sermons. Once I was lucky
when he put his blessing hand on my head. I was ready. I was dry fodder. I have
no other explanation other than to take it as a case of Shakti pat. It
triggered a chain of experiences that shook the theoretical foundations of my
knowledge. Just recently I had been lucky to be blessed by His Holiness Dalai
Lama as well. So I would say that was a lucky period for me.
Shortly after his blessing touch
on my head, on my Tuesday fasting I was reading Hanuman chalisa from a little booklet, incense and oil lamp burning in
front of the idol. Then it happened. An intense external force gripped me very
tight. I was in perfect awareness but the body was under the control of forces that
I cannot attribute to my conscious mind. I was twisted and turned in very tough
yogic postures which I cannot even think of performing in normal condition. It
was like a mysterious, profoundly powerful hand was twisting and turning me in
tough yogic postures. I was helpless and allowed myself to be treated like a
ball of dough being made into many shapes. Everything was unfolding by itself. These
were no weird, asymmetrical contortions. There was a symmetry, a harmony, a precision
behind them. As if each set of movements would complete a cycle.
Lord Hanuman’s idol was put on a
little house temple of stone. The stone ledge in the front for placing lamp and
offering had a sharp edge. I was twisted in a lotus posture and my torso
started going down, taking my forehead towards the sharp stone edge. The slow
rhythmic descent to the stone edge was very precise to leave the middle of my
eyebrow on the edge. Then the brow started drawing along the thin edge. Just a
millimeter down and it would have injured my eye because the rub of the eyebrow
on the edge was quite forceful. Completing the cycle on one side, the same
happened with the other eyebrow on the other side. The divine synchronicity knows
more than our fear, planning and calculations. There was flawless geometry and
timing behind these movements. There were many such movements for around 45
minutes. Strangely, I wasn’t scared even for a second during all this. Some
mystical assurance kept me convincing that all this is good for you. So there
was no panic. How will fear and panic survive when one is straightaway linked
to the cords of divinity?
After that the force left me in
voluntary control of my body. My spine got so tautly drawn and straight that I felt
like a wooden plank. Then the sweet aftermaths of the divine exercise performed
on my body by the higher force—a prasada, a sweet reward. I found myself
singing Hanuman chalisa all by
myself. I hadn’t been able to memorize it in a yearlong chanting on Tuesdays.
Now it was freely flowing from my mouth.
After that for about six months I
would experience involuntary mudras and body movements that would play with me
like a puppet. Then the crawling sensations started. The movement of prana channels across the body. Like
serpents crawling over back and head. There are little channels of crawling
energies that I feel all the time. They aren’t painful. One gets used to them
after a time. Different channels take shape at different stages. But the one on
agya chakra is most forceful, keeps
on sending streams of invisible energies down the bridge of the nose and on
both sides. Another on the right side of lower back is also significantly active,
and many along the spine. I know these are the pranic onslaughts let loose by Kundalini
to remove the significant karmic entanglements across my system.
Maybe all this happens to make us
realize that we aren’t just what we think ourselves to be. Or maybe to trash
our ego that you aren’t solely in the driver’s seat of your destiny. Primarily,
it’s to convince you that there are bigger realities and dimensions. At the
body’s level, maybe it’s all meant to remove the psychic entanglements in our
karmic structure. I know I have lots of karmic entanglements from the past to
resolve and that’s why the rise of energy has posed such challenges. It isn’t
necessary that someone else will go through the same sensations. All of us have
unique genetic structure—an offshoot of our unique karmic structure—which responds
in various ways to the exposure of this extra surge of energy. Still there are
some common observations and on the basis of those experiences, observations
and responses of the human body the theoretical framework of Kundalini has been
set up to help us understand the basics of it. But one thing is sure, beyond
the tiny framework of commonalities the manifestations in different bodies are
varying to a big degree. So we cannot generalize or compare one’s with the
other’s. These are mere pointers. I just shared my experience and it doesn’t in
any way lay claim to any fundamental truth or law behind the Kindalini
experience.
The journey continues my dear
fellow travellers on the path. As the brain adjusts to this new surge of energy
cascading across its hitherto unused neural pathways, I hear various types of sounds
in my ears and the head. The story of sounds that you must have read one hears
in Kundalini awakening is definitly true. I hear buzzing bees, tinkling bells,
sharp chin-chin of anklets, drums, flute and rumbling of clouds. This is the
divine music of high vibrational frequencies. Meditating on them can take a sadhak in very dimensions of perception.
But I’m a common man. I have my responsibilities and worldly duties to fulfill
to resolve all my karmic issues still lying unsettled and creating my circumstances.
So I travel on the path without any spiritual pretenses—balancing my path
between worldly needs and the food for my soul.
I’m open to guidance. It always
arrives from different corners. Presently, I have a hunch that His Holiness
Mahaavatar Babaji is guiding me on the path. And I feel privileged and blessed.
I’m not bothered about the truth of it. Laugh at me, scoff at me but that’s my
truth at the moment.
Skirmish with a sadhu
He is a saffron clad-baba, aged around forty, swiping his wooden staff to avail a lift on some two-wheeler. He is well built and a mere look at his ears bearing glass rings makes his identity evident. He is a follower of Nath sampradaya, a follower of Baba Gorakh Nath. He couldn’t have thrown his staff in front of a more suitable vehicle. With the Baba confidently pillion riding I ask him the whereabouts of his journey.
Becoming an ascetic wasn’t his
conscious choice. His parents hadn’t any child even after many years of
marriage and they made a vow before the holy fire in an ashram belonging to Nath Sampradaya that if they had
children with the great saint’s blessings, they will offer the first born to
the sect to be raised as a complete renunciator on the path. With the great
saint’s blessings they had four children and keeping their vow they offered the
first born to dhoona, the holy
fireplace at the ashram. Now the very same sadhu is pillion riding my bike.
He has been to all corners of
India on pilgrimages and evaluates people’s worth in terms of their disposition
towards kindness. The latter aptly measured in terms of their opening the purse
for charity donations. These are hard times. A baba has to have something in
the purse to survive because everything is monetized. Literally every breath we
take seems to come at some financial cost. So this baba too is entitled to innocently
covet money like all of us do. I don’t have any right to expect too many spiritual
and hard-penanced elements in this baba’s life because asceticism isn’t his
choice. It has been handed over to him by his parents. Thankfully he seems to have
accepted his fate and doesn’t seem to hold any grudge against them for
depriving him of a role on the normal worldly stage.
The crux of his philosophy that
he told me can be summarized in a few lines: ‘Health is the biggest blessing a
human being can possess. Health is as important to a fakir as it’s to a king.
Both cannot follow their path with full commitment with ill health.’ Well, cannot
agree with him more.
As he disembarks from the bike, I
teasingly ask him, ‘Should I give you 100 rupees maharaj?’ As I’m drawing out my purse he comes to fresher spark of life,
‘Of course beta, of course, some chai
pani!’ The major advantage of being a sanyasi
is that you get entitled to call everyone a beta,
anyone from newborns to centurions. He has quick eyes to scan the contents in
my purse as I search for the promised 100 rupee note. The money is given. But
these are hard times you know. Nothing seems sufficient, at least financially.
I am expecting a smiling blessing but I find him serious and pointing to the
lower side pocket of his saffron robe. The cloth is well-washed and looks quite
new, not worn out at all. A bit of stitching has gone in a corner of the
pocket.
‘The robe is torn beta. Baba would be pleased if you get
him a new one,’ he sulks. I am about to laugh and say, ‘Baba, it just needs a
stitch that would come for free, so why take the trouble of getting a new one
for this.’ But I keep quite. ‘Maybe even a baba needs safe new pockets to do justice
to the charity money by keeping it well guarded in sturdy pockets,’ I tease him
within myself without giving any outward sign of my insights.
In any case he has decided to further
lighten the weight of my purse which is already light. ‘I don’t have a clue to the
price of an ascetic robe. How much do you think it costs?’ I ask him. ‘About
600 rupees!’ he tells smartly. Now I realize he has blessed the 500 rupee note
in my purse by his kindly gaze and with this additional amount, apart from the
one already in his grasp, the charity would match the price of a robe. I feel
primarily sad at such times, if nothing else. So resignedly give into his charity-seeking
enthusiasm and hand over the 500 rupee note to him. I casually look at the 100
rupee note in his hand. He instinctively puts both of them in his cloth bag as
if afraid that I may ask for the smaller denomination to be returned in lieu of
the bigger note.
Before I realize he has drawn
something out of his pocket, grabs my hand and secretly puts something on my
palm, folding his hand over my closed fist as if he has handed me the most
miraculous nag mani, the gem of
alchemy. ‘Keep it with you and it will save you from all dangers, make you a
millionaire, make you the luckiest man on earth!’ his blessings are profuse.
After all, 600 rupees in one stroke sometimes turns out to be more than the
entire charity that they collect in a week. Most probably I have just contributed
to his ganja smoke at the most.
I am about to burst out with
laughter at his blessed gem but to help him assume that I’m in awe of his
blessing I keep silent. It’s a five-mukhi
rudraksh bead, that too a fake one,
most probably. But to make him happy I keep it in my pocket. I have no reason
to be angry at him. I cannot hold too lofty spiritual expectations from him
because the path isn’t born of his conscious choice. He was just pushed into it,
like most of teeming millions that we see robed in ascetic cloths across India.
He is still speaking and before I
hear some other financial plan for the upkeep of his saintly ways I shoot away
like a rocket. He was still speaking while I sped away. I don’t know why but I
rode pretty fast after that. Maybe it was the reaction of my subconscious mind
for losing some money because money has turned out to be as dear as life these
days.
He was practical enough to ask my
name and the village of my residence. ‘I will pay a visit to your nagri,’ I heard him shouting as I sped
away. Most probably he finds me someone who is simpleton enough whose purse can
be opened with the slightest effort. But he is grossly mistaken on this. I am
happy to contribute to his ganja smoke once but if he commits the mistake of
following my track to my village for further ganja doses then the baba will be
trouble.
Here is my plan of action if he
is unlucky enough to follow the foolish scheme: I will welcome him at my place,
offer him water, serve him tea and ask for food if he is hungry. And the moment
he demands money—which he would most probably—I would produce the fake rudraksh bead asking for full refund.
Friday, September 22, 2023
Skirmish with a ghost
I’m just a passing phenomenon. At the quantum level I have no boundaries. At the level of microscopic particles, the smallest that we have spotted till now with our instruments, I’m merely and assemblage of spark; I’m just a boundary-less conglomeration of tiniest sparks amidst the same going around me. Now the question arises who am I. I consider myself as a part of this overall conglomeration of tiniest energy sparks that has identified with certain characteristics to automatically spin out a certain pattern in the energetic conglomeration to manifest at the level of body, my thoughts, emotions, circumstances.
Human body is a far-far
short-lived phenomenon than we consider. Each cell in our body vibrates with
millions of transitional movements each second. A massive force of change at
the core of our assemblage whose effects we feel in the form of changing
thoughts, passing emotions, shifting perspectives, fluctuating views and more.
That means I’m just an energy field with certain predominant proclivities that
is being—always—cut through other energy fields that are floating around, or I
am passing through them.
From here arises the concept of
getting affected by entities, disembodied souls and all the scary world of
ghosts and ghouls. All these are mere symbolic representations of the energy
fields that leave effect on us, somehow interfere with our cellular and
molecular structure, the energy assemblage that we consider ourselves to be us.
Their manifestations in our system are in proportion to our own pain, suffering
and fears. It’s just a synchronicity with that particular frequency. Of course
a field of pain and suffering would look anchor point in a similar pool of
energy. Then there are stories about their weird, fearsome shapes and
appearances. Their nasty appearance is an assemblage of our own pain and
suffering and fears. We generate a reality according to our imaginative fears.
I have no doubts some people see such fearsome, weird shapes but these are mere
the impressions of their own fears, augmented by the foreign energy field of
pain that is passing through them at the moment, created on the screen of
sense-perception.
Some say that most of the
thoughts and emotions passing in us aren’t our own. They are triggered by
entities. That’s plain and simple crap. They are simply responses and reactions
born of what my energy and cellular arrangement—which I consider to be me—in overlapping
with other arrangements (bodily visible or not) as I walk on the stage of life.
This is inevitable. That’s how it is, because at the quantum level I have no
boundary as such and one part will mix and come into contact with the other
with as much naturality as one portion of air is always passing through other
portions all the time. So my thoughts and emotions are my own, be that due to
the passing of any type of energetic pattern (aligning with me or not) through
the quantum space that looks like my body at the level of normal sense
perception. How will your bubble stay aloof and untouched by all that is
floating around you as you move on the journey? Put your body under the most
capable microscope and it will show you as an assemblage of subatomic sparks surrounded
by similar twinklings. So my thoughts and my emotions are my own, just a
stimuli to the vastness surrounding me. It simply cannot be otherwise. So take ownership
for what goes inside you. As a conscious maker of your circumstances, some
meaning out of this utmost meaninglessness around, the onus is on us to manage
our thoughts and emotions. The talks of tantra
and ghosts seem fascinating. Very interesting like a movie. Enjoy them but don’t
give it undue importance. It is a merely a symbolic representation of the interaction
of varying patterns of energy that happens by default because there are no
boundaries among various parts at the quantum level.
My own experience in this domain
happened about 15 years back. I worked in corporate at that time and stayed on
the outskirts of Delhi. It was a small two-storeyed house with some open wooded
lot on one side and an abandoned house on the other. I was a regular worshipper
of Mahakali at that time. My mother had prepared very sweet beshan laddoos for me. I was on cloud
nine with soft emotions for someone and was on a late night call with the
symbol of that affection. I was leaning against the parapet wall facing that
abandoned house and eating the sugary laddoo.
All smiles and laughter and goodie feelings, unbothered of the time and place.
It was midnight, exact zero hour as my neighboring bunch of boys would tell me
later. Well, eating sugary laddoo at
midnight leaning over the wall looking over an abandoned house where someone
had committed suicide. This statement didn’t mean anything to me prior to the
experience. I wasn’t aware of the time, about sugary sweetmeat, about the
suicide in the abandoned house. I didn’t know anything about it. Who would be
bothered about normal worldly crap when he is on a late night call with someone
special?
I was grinning, like a horse,
with the solace of the sweetest emotions and lots of sugar in me, one big laddoo already in me and the other half-eaten
held in my hand and the time midnight. My horse-grin stopped suddenly. There
was a buzzing humming vibration in the air around and I distinctly felt
something colliding into me. As if something entered from the back. It was so impactful
at the normal perception level that I instinctively straightened up as if
someone had pushed a force against my back. The outside agent was so palpable
as to trigger a panic reaction immediately. All love was kicked away. By
instinct Mother Mahakali’s name surfaced on my lips and hurriedly I came down.
There I was lying on my bed, my neighbors, all nice gentle boys from Bihar,
surrounded and looking at me with concern. ‘Bhaiyaa
are you mad! Eating laddoo at
midnight! The abandoned house by our side has a history of suicide,’ Radhe, the
gentlest of them, was much worried. Faith is always stronger than any fear. I
was a pretty serious worshipper of Mahakali at that time. So I was perfectly
normal after that initial trigger of fear. I was joking, laughing, giving them
a live commentary about how does it feel to have a ghost inside one’s body.
It was quite an experience. That
particular build-up of energy (which still spun around the cosmos with its pain
and suffering after unnaturally shedding the body) cascaded around my system
for around half an hour. It was quite a force, moving like tidal waves from
head to tail, and then moving up again, as if scanning each part of me for some
solace, some synchronicity with its own structure of pain. I could feel my body
getting heated up from inside but there wasn’t any sweating. I gave a live
commentary of all this with my share of jokes injected in between. Then the
poor energetic structure of pain moved on. Maybe it found my jokes offensive.
The moment it left me I could distinctly declare that I’m ghost-free. There was
jubilation among the group of boys. They really respected me as an elder brother,
worked in call centers and more than salary considered girlfriends as the main
incentive for staying in stinking Delhi for the pittance of a salary. I would
pay for the kitchen purchases and in return I would have home-cooked food with
lots of respect. So they danced and we raised a toast to our victory over the
ghost. Sorry to disappoint my well-wishers who consider me to be a teetotaler but
I have tasted liquor on special occasions and beating a ghost was one such occasion,
so we all had couple of moderate pegs each during our post-midnight
celebrations. I have experienced all that is good and bad in life. Maybe mother
existence wants to keep me level headed and not get egoistic about my purity
which is the lighter version of addiction, addiction to one’s good image.
Luckily, most of the people consider me a good man.
And what about the ghost? And
midnight? And the sugary laddoo? Well,
of course when someone unnaturally exits the portals of life with so much pain
as in a suicide, the bundle of energy spins around looking for succor, and some
of us come across this part of air that obviously passes through our system, simply
because we don’t have boundaries at the quantum level. It’s a houseless
traveller looking for alleviation of its pains and gropes around for some
anchor support. It feeds on our fear and frustrations. But I believe more in
being receptive to saintly energy fields passing through me. To make the
negative energy fields ineffective against my house, my cellular structure, is
the main domain of creation with volition and effort. That is what making one’s
destiny is all about. To be a good manager of one’s own—again I emphasize these
are our own, so no point in relegating them to the imposition from the entities—thoughts
and emotions. What about sugar and ghosts? Again a very simple scientific
explanation. Maybe the sudden bombardment of sugar in the system leaves the
cells—and the quantum field around them—flummoxed, lazy, or overburdened, or
some other tizzying thing, making them more prone to the entering energy field
where it can penetrate a bit deeper into the system to impose its pain and
suffering into our system, triggering a manifestation of fear, agonies and
suffering analogous to those witnessed by the carrier entity. What about
midnight and ghosts? Well, most of us have our most optimum time and
circumstances to be most effective. Light is healing and divinity. Darkness is
chaos and pain. Maybe the energy system of pain operates at its optimum level in
the absence of light.
Jai Mahavatar Babaji! As I write
this his big kindly eyes look at me from the picture that I have affixed on the
wall. He is guiding me at the moment. It’s my truth at the moment. And who
knows Babaji pushed a portion of his divine persona in my direction triggering
a chain of thoughts early in the morning. Let’s smile, laugh and make the most
of this phenomena that we understand to be our individual life. And consciously
take ownership of our own thoughts and emotions, manage them in a way that we
are more open to love and grace of the saintly energies and get free of fear
from the bundles of pain spinning around.
Wednesday, September 20, 2023
The snaky history of a tiny locality
Tau Tarif Singh, drawing lineage from my great granduncle, was a small man with a huge well-composed demeanor. Very gentle in behavior, soft with words and peaceful in movements, he hardly created any ripples on the stage of life with his presence. There was an exception though. There would be a complete reversal of his persona at the sight of a snake. He would be filled with lightening agility and within the flash of a second he would run after the helpless reptile, hold it by the tail, swing it around in a highly technical way and bang it on the ground with such force that it would make a second strike almost redundant.
Let him see a snake at his house,
in the locality, in the village, in the fields or open grounds or even a
forest he won’t miss an opportunity to culminate its journey on earth. His
biggest feat was holding two snakes by their tails simultaneously and swinging
in his special way and banging them on the ground to finish their journey. Surprisingly
he was never bitten in the task. To this day I wonder why would such a peaceful
and calm person turn into a snake-annihilator at the mere sight of the poor
reptile. Maybe some karmic entanglement with snakes; possibly Tau was a
mongoose, a peacock or a garuda in his previous birth and his evolution into a different
species still retained the predominant animosity against snakes.
From the village standards,
Grandfather was a reasonably educated man. He was in love with mathematics and
that helped him in calculating things with logic without getting clouded by
unnecessary emotions. Grandmother was very tart with her tongue and he matched
her in the matrimonial equation with the agility of his hardworking hand. Their
domestic life, like any other farmer couple, was defined by these skirmishes
between the female tongue and the male hand. But she died quite young leaving Grandfather’s
hands free to engage in more suitable occupations. Grandfather was neutral to
snakes. ‘One has to kill them if they sneak into the house, but one shouldn’t
bother about them in the open,’ he maintained. His closest encounter with a
snake happened when he was around eighty. He was still active in farming till
then. It was evening and he was lying in the field, his headgear bunched under
his head and one leg raised in the middle and the other supporting on the other
knee. He was smoking a little hookah, his head tilted to one side to draw
smoke. Another farmer was sitting nearby. A black snake chose to keep its way
straight, instead of taking a detour. Grandfather’s head was tilted in the
other direction. The other farmer saw it when it had already crept up to Grandfather’s
stomach. Then Grandfather’s mathematical logic worked to save him from a
snakebite. He turned a stone, didn’t move at all and allowed the entire length
of the fearsome snake to creep over him. After that Grandfather took the
longest draught at hookah in his life. ‘I have never seen so much of smoke
coming out of me in my entire life,’ he told me later. ‘She was your wife who
came to scare you for all your agility with your hands,’ the other farmer
joked.
Father was a philosophical man.
He could talk better than anyone I have ever heard in my life. His was a world
of books. He wasn’t bothered much about worldly affairs. He was an athletic man
and could have been at least a national level player if things had gone well.
He was brainy enough to be a senior bureaucrat if things had taken a sympathetic
turn for him. His oratory would have made him a famous politician if things had
happened as they usually happen in the life of a successful man. But none of
these happened and he was contended to be a governmental servant with hundreds
of books and a philosophical mind. As the family patriarch he had to take the
responsibility of killing a big-hooded cobra that had crept into the cattle
barn. Mother raised a hue and cry and before Father could realize anything she
had handed him a stick to make him realize his worldly duties. Father killed
that big snake. I was very small at that time. And the very next day as I scampered
around to play in the street I fell headlong and my forehead hit the sharp edge
of a brick leaving me all bloody. I still carry the mark. ‘I hit the cobra’s
hood and see the karma comes back in the form of this injury on my son’s
forehead,’ Father drew his philosophical reasoning.
The biggest cobra that I have
ever seen being killed also needs an account here. It was a moonlit night and a
majestic cobra sneaked into the locality. The village was pretty open till
then. A horse panicked and neighed a warning. The dogs barked. By chance, there
were all children and female onlookers at that time. The stick was handed over
to the only grown up male available. Dheere cowered with the stick. He was—sadly—nicknamed
Langda because his one leg was incapacitated because of polio. Dheere struck
quite forcefully, missed the mark and his crippled leg lost footing and he fell
down with the strike. But after that he regained composure and somehow managed
to beat the entire ground with almost a hundred strikes in rapid-fire and by
chance one of the strikes hit the cobra in the middle injuring it, cutting its
movements and then the striker had it easy.
My own quota in the sins against
the snakes involves killing two harmless little common wolf snakes that had
entered our house and my panicked mother handed over the responsibility to me
as the new family patriarch. I performed the job with shaking legs. The other
partnership in crime occurred when I held the torch and my uncle pounded a
harmless rat snake. Yet another time, I firmly held a torch as my younger brother killed a poisonous krait snake that had crept into the garden at night. Kraits usually crawl out in the dark so one has to be careful about them. They aren't too big and can hide in little spaces coiling themselves in a distinct manner and that makes them more dangerous than a cobra. Cobras are full of attitude and don't believe in stealth fight. They would hiss and raise hood to warn you beforehand. Other battles against snakes involved throwing pebbles at
the harmless water sakes in the village pond. They would dive playfully and
would emerge at a distance. That was quite a fun for both the parties. I remember
once I was walking on my little legs on the playground outside the village. It
was a faint foot trail in the little grass. A cobra was also enjoying its walk
on the same trail from the opposite direction. It stood its ground, maybe
finding me small enough to turn a bully. It stood its ground, raised it hood to
full spread and warned me to get off the way from a distance. I took to my
heels and watched from a distance. Male cobra is arrogant I have heard. There
it passed following the foot trail. I remember once me and my younger brother were playing hide and seek in a ruined abandoned house in the village. Its roof had caved in and one wall fallen leaving it open on one side. As we stepped there a big yellow rat snake got scared. Since there was only one opening all three of us were running in the same direction. Indian rat snakes are quite big and lengthy and that makes them quite scary. But they are harmless and mostly get killed because of their similarity to cobra. At that young age a snake was just a snake and I can still remember that nightmare after all these decades.
Now I’m more balanced and logical
in my approach to snakes. I can at least marvel at the crawling majesty of
snakes that I come across in my solitary walks in the countryside. They are
just creatures like any other creature. In the Delhi NCR there are just two
poisonous snakes—out of the forty species found in the area—named Indian cobra
and krait. The rest are harmless long earthworms and get unnecessarily killed
because of our natural instinctive fears. Knowledge is empowering. It dispels darkness.
So now I am more adjusting to their presence.
Kaka Maharaj, who stays in a hut
by the canal outside the village, has so many snakes around but this isn’t an
issue at all with him. There is a clump of banana trees just by his hut. Once
as I approached to pay him a visit I saw a cobra basking in the sun. It
scampered into the clump of trees when I arrived. I told about the naga to Kaka Maharaj. ‘This land is for
all and everything,’ is all he said. After our talks on the matters of
spirituality I saw him stepping into the clump of banana trees to take out a
basket he had hung on a frond. He went in quite naturally. He had even forgotten
that I had told him about a snake there.