Samudra Manthan or The churning of the ocean of
milk is one of the most famous episodes in the Puranas and is celebrated in a
major way every twelve years in the festival known as KUMBHA MELA. The story
appears in the Srimad Bhagavatam, the Mahabharata and the Vishnu Purana.
Samudra Manthan is
also known as: -
- Samudra
Manthanam - Manthanam is the
Sanskrit equivalent of Manthan meaning 'to churn'.
- Sagar
Manthan - Sagar is another word
for Samudra, both meaning an ocean or large water body.
- Kshirsagar Manthan - Kshirsagar means the ocean of milk. Kshirsagar = Kshir (milk) + Sagar (ocean).
The story represents the spiritual endeavor of a
person to achieve self-realisation through concentration of mind, withdrawal of
senses, control of desires and practice of austerities and asceticism.
- The Devas and Asuras represent
the positives and negatives respectively of one's personality. The
participation of both the Devas and the Asuras signifies that when one is
seeking bliss through spiritual practice, one has to integrate and
harmonise both the positive and negative aspects and put both the energies
to work for the common goal.
- The Ocean
of Milk is the mind or the human consciousness. The mind is like an
ocean while the thoughts and emotions are the waves in the ocean.
- Mandhara Mountain symbolises concentration. The word Mandhara is made up of two words Mana (mind) and Dhara (a single line) which means holding the mind in one line. This is possible only by concentration.
- Mount Mandhara was upheld by Lord Vishnu as a Kurma (tortoise). The tortoise here symbolises the withdrawal of the senses into oneself (just as a tortoise withdraws its head into its shell) as one practices mental concentration and meditation or contemplation.
- Vasuki, the serpent king symbolises desire. Vasuki used in
the churning of the ocean denotes that the Devas and the demons held
desire (to seek immortality) as a rope and churned the mind with the help
of concentration and withdrawal of the senses. Desire, if not controlled
will overpower and destroy an individual.
- The Halahala
Poison symbolizes suffering and pain (counter-reaction of the
mind and body) that one undergoes at the beginning of spiritual sadhana
(practice). When the mind is subjected to intense concentration, the first
thing that comes out of the process is intense suffering and great inner
turmoil. These must be resolved otherwise further progress is not
possible.
- Lord
Shiva symbolises the ascetic
principle. His role in this story as the consumer of poison suggests that
one can deal with the early problems of spiritual life by cultivating the
qualities of Lord Shiva, namely, courage, initiative, willingness,
discipline, simplicity, austerity, detachment, compassion, pure love and
asceticism.
- The various
precious objects that come out of the ocean during the churning
stand for the psychic or spiritual powers (Siddhis) which one gains as
s/he progresses spiritually from stage to stage. The seeker should be
careful about these powers as they can hamper her/his progress unless s/he
uses them judiciously, not for selfish gains but for others' welfare. This
is the reason why the Gods and demons distributed these objects as they
did not want to lose sight of their original aim which was to gain
immortality.
- Dhanvantari symbolises health and signifies that immortality
(longevity, to be correct) or spiritual success can be achieved only when
the body and the mind are in a perfect state of health.
- Mohini symbolises delusion of the mind in the form of
(or originating from) pride. It is the pride of achievement to which the
Asuras or the demons succumbed and thus lost sight of their goal. Pride
and egoism are the last hurdles one has to overcome in spiritual life
before experiencing self-realisation.
- The Amrit symbolises
the ultimate achievement of the goal of self-realistion.
- Lakshmi represents universal enrichment which comes as an automatic by-product of the internal self-realization or Amrita.
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