The Rishis, Yogis, and Sanyasis didnât create rituals for fear â they created them for alignment.
Every Abhisheka, every mantra, every food offering is a map to awaken the divine within.
The beauty of our Dharma lies not just in devotion, but in discipline.
Because the Universe itself follows Vidhi â law, rhythm, and ritual.
đïž Return to your roots. Follow your paddhati.
Let your sadhana become your sanctuary.
What we call âastrologyâ today is a faint echo of that vision.
But to the Rishis, the stars were not decorations; they were doorways.
Each Graha â each planet â was a living code of consciousness, an organ in the cosmic body of the Divine.
And your birth chart?
Itâs the snapshot of how the universe breathed you into being.
âSecrets of Shakti: The Navaratri No One Speaks Ofâ
đž This Navaratri, step beyond the familiar tales of Mahishasura.
Discover the Tantric secrets of Maa Shaktiâthe goddess who drinks poison, becomes sound, weaves galaxies with her hair, and reveals herself as silence.
âšStories hidden in Shakta philosophy, only on Tales of Divinity by MsK.đ±
Chidambaram is not just a temple â it is a cosmic code carved into stone. Hidden within its sanctum is the Chidambaram Rahasya â the mystery of emptiness, where no idol stands, only a golden curtain veiling the void. To the unknowing eye, it is nothing. To the seeker, it is everything â the dance of Shiva as pure consciousness in the element of Akasha.
Legends whisper that this temple is more than a place of worship; it is a portal where time bends, where Siddhas once vanished into other realms, and where space itself reveals its secrets. Its architecture mirrors the cosmos, its roof encodes human breath, and its sanctum opens into infinity
In this episode, we explore the idea of marriage as a sacred union through the lens of the Vedas. Far beyond a social contract, the Vedas describe marriage as a spiritual partnership rooted in dharma, harmony, and the pursuit of higher truth. Weâll look at how sacred rituals, mantras, and timeless wisdom guide the bond between partners, transforming marriage into a path of growth, devotion, and shared purpose.
âLong before modern maps, the ancient Puranas described the Earth in ways that still bend our imagination. At the center was JambudvÄ«pa, the cosmic continent, with Mount Meru as its axis â the very pillar connecting heaven and earth. Surrounding it stretched nine great Varshas: from Bharata Varsha, the land of karma and rebirth, to Uttarakuru, a paradise of abundance near the north, to Ilavrata, the divine land where even humans could not enter, guarded by Shiva and Parvati themselves.
Beyond JambudvÄ«pa lay other continents â Shalmala, Kusha, Krauncha, Shaka, and Pushkara DvÄ«pa â each separated by oceans of honey, ghee, and milk, each ruled by devas, rishis, and mystical beings.
Were these myths⊠or memories of lost civilizations, hidden geographies, and higher dimensions? Could JambudvÄ«pa be the Vedic equivalent of Pangaea â the ancient supercontinent?
In this episode of Tales of Divinity, we unravel the Varshas and DvÄ«pas of the Puranas, connecting them with todayâs maps, exploring their spiritual significance, and discovering how they mirror our inner cosmos.
What if I told you⊠Mount Kailash isnât the real Kailash? That what we see is only a divine projection⊠and the true peak lies hidden in another dimension.
From the golden pillar of Meru to the fire-body of Arunachala⊠from Nanda Deviâs secret valley to Girnarâs whispering stones â these mountains are not just rocks and snow. They are cosmic gateways⊠choosing who may enter.
In this captivating episode of Tales of Divinity, I unravel the mystique of Atlantisânot as a mythical island lost to legend, but as an advanced civilization buried beneath the icy expanse of Antarctica. Drawing from Platoâs accounts, ancient maps like the Piri Reis, Edgar Cayceâs psychic readings, and even Vedic scriptures, this narrative explores how Atlanteans were celestial beings with knowledge of cosmic energy, crystal technology, and multidimensional portals. Their downfall, much like the Tripura of Hindu lore, came through spiritual arrogance. I connected the dots between the pyramids beneath the Antarctic ice, alien origins, and remnants of Atlantean bloodlines scattered across the Andes, Egypt, and Indiaâoffering not just a story, but a revelation that challenges our understanding of history, divinity, and our forgotten selves.
Hereâs the pdf you can refer to
https://www.academia.edu/128268052/Atlantis_Exploring_Origins_of_A_Civilization_Revised_.
In this heartfelt birthday special, Meena Sri Chandanaâyour host of Tales of Divinityâturns 26 and takes you on a soul-reflective journey through the beloved show FRIENDS. This isnât just nostalgia; itâs a revelation of what each character taught her about love, healing, friendships, boundaries, and staying true to oneself.
Kumari Kandam is a legendary sunken continent believed to have existed south of present-day India, in the Indian Ocean. Rooted deeply in ancient Tamil literature and mythology, it is described as a vast and advanced landmass where Tamil civilization thrived long before any known historical records.
According to Sangam texts and later Tamil traditions, Kumari Kandam was the seat of the first Tamil Sangam (academy of poets and scholars), and home to wise kings, sages, and divine beings. It is believed to have submerged due to a great deluge (akin to the global flood myths) and is often linked with Lemuria, a now-discredited 19th-century scientific theory proposing a lost continent to explain similarities in fauna across India, Madagascar, and Africa.
The Garuda Purana (GP) is one of the 18 Mahapuranas and stands out for its unique blend of spiritual, metaphysical, ritualistic, scientific, and practical knowledge. It is a dialogue between Lord Vishnu and His mount Garuda, and it touches upon nearly every aspect of human lifeâfrom life to death, from the stars to the soul.
1. The Journey of the Soul & Afterlife
âą Core theme: What happens after death, the transition of the soul, Yamaâs judgment, experiences in heaven and hell, and the soulâs rebirth.
âą Detailed descriptions of various hells (Narakas), karmic consequences, and rituals (shraaddha) to support the departed.
đč 2. Rituals, Death, and Rebirth
âą Explains Antyeshti (death rites), funeral rituals, post-death ceremonies (like 10th-day, 11th-day rites).
âą How these help the soul cross into Pitru Loka and attain peace or liberation.
đč 3. Dharma (Ethics and Right Conduct)
âą Offers guidance on righteous living, duties of individuals, kings, householders, and renunciates.
âą Emphasizes truth, devotion, non-violence, charity, and the laws of karma.
Have you ever made a mistake and then felt that sharp sting in your chest â that sinking feeling that something inside you just⊠broke?
Or maybe you didnât make a big mistake, but a slow sadness came upon you, like clouds gathering over the heart. It doesnât always announce itself with drama â sometimes itâs just a quiet heaviness, a sense that youâre not where you thought youâd be. That youâve fallen short â somehow.
In moments like this, our first instinct is usually to resist. To escape, blame, distract, or scold ourselves.
But this is where the wisdom of the Upanishads comes in â gently, like a hand on your shoulder in the dark. They donât tell us to run from sadness. They invite us to stop.
To listen.
To turn inward, and look â not at the world, but at the one who is feeling all this.
The ancient rishis understood that sadness isnât a flaw in the human experience. Itâs a doorway.
They called it tapasya â the inner fire that refines us, that burns away the false so that the true may emerge.
And when we make mistakes â when we falter â that fire becomes very real. But instead of being consumed by it, we are asked to witness it.
Then even nothingness was not, nor existence,
There was no air then, nor the heavens beyond it.â
Before time, space, light, matter â there was no âbefore.â
No up or down. No gods. No sky. Not even void.
This verse shatters all concepts. Itâs not a beginning â itâs a non-state beyond logic.
What if past, present, and future are all happening right now?
The BhÄgavata PurÄáča reveals Time (KÄla) as a divine force â not a straight line.
Yoga VasiáčŁáčha calls time a creation of thought â dissolve the mind, dissolve time.
You exist in many timelines, many versions, across multiple universes.
Your Higher Self watches it all â beyond birth, beyond death.
DĂ©jĂ vu, dreams, instincts â echoes from parallel lives.
Long before modern science unraveled the double helix, ancient sages meditated upon a symbol that held the secret of all creation â the Shiva Lingam. Not just a religious icon, the Lingam represents the union of consciousness and energy, the still point from which the universe spirals forth. Its form â cylindrical, unending, coiled with the serpent of Kundalini â mirrors the very structure of DNA, the double-spiral code embedded in every cell of our body. Could it be that the Rishis saw what we are only beginning to understand â that the human body is a temple, and the Lingam is its cosmic blueprint?â
Dandibhatla Vishwanatha Sastry, a distinguished Vedic scholar from Rajahmundry, Andhra Pradesh, was invited by German scientists in 1938 to assist in deciphering Sanskrit hymns from the Yajur Veda and Atharva Veda. These hymns were purportedly studied to aid in the development of missile technology prior to World War II. Sastry was renowned for his expertise in Vedic scriptures, particularly in the application aspects of the Yajurveda and Atharvaveda. Some sources suggest that his portrait is displayed at a university in Frankfurt, Germany, as a mark of respect for his contributions
Astrology is the study of how celestial bodiesâsuch as planets, stars, the Sun, and the Moonâinfluence human life and natural events. Itâs based on the idea that the positions and movements of these bodies at the time of a personâs birth can shape their personality, behavior, and destiny.
Sitaâs Pativratyam:
She followed Rama into exile, showing unwavering love and loyalty.
Proved her purity through the Agni Pariksha (trial by fire).
Even in exile during pregnancy, she remained devoted in heart and soul.
Her final return to Mother Earth upheld her dignity and chastity.
Mandodariâs Pativratyam:
Though aware of Ravanaâs flaws, she remained a wise and faithful wife.
She advised him to follow dharma and return Sita.
Mourned his death with dignity, symbolizing strength and loyalty.
Iravai, the son of Arjuna, sacrificed himself for victory at Kurukshetra after marrying Krishna in the form of Mohiniâsymbolizing divine love before death.
Barbarika, Bhimaâs grandson, possessed unstoppable power but offered his head to Krishna to prevent imbalance in the war.