The Golden Spiral
Chapter Three
The Golden Spiral – As it was revealed to me
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I would like to mention about the parables in Mahabharata that were actually not addressed by many authors. As Sage Vyasa was creating the various characters of the epic that he wrote, as it happened during the 3100-3000 b.c. period, he was narrating about many splinter warring groups and was also giving an account of all the “Giants’ that ruled various states of India then. Some of them were considered very highly skilled and were a major threat to the righteous in the war to ensue later on, under the able guidance of Krishna himself.
Vaayasa created many characters, he obviously also tried to create a character called Krishna. But Krishna being the Supreme Being Himself, outsmarted Vyasa and went on to make subtle changes in all that followed as part of the Mahabharata scripted by Vyasa. What kind of delusions Vyasa must have been in when he thought, “here I am scripting the greatest of wars to be fought between the righteous and unrighteous.” When Krishna arrived at the scene, he showed that both the righteous and unrighteous belong only to his being. He goes on to show to his protégé Arjuna that good and bad are just perceptions and not anything to do with the Atman or Self, which is Eternal and nothing to be grieved about.
Arjuna, the righteous one, as his name suggests, asked Lord Krishna, “Oh Dear Krishna, you say that there is no good nor any bad. You also ask me to kill my own great grand father Bheeshma, my teacher Drona, my own cousins for the sake of this land, called kingdom. Why must I believe in you? What is it that makes me feel that I must listen to you and not to what my heart beckons me to do? Why can’t I just walk away from this battle and stay in peace? Why must I kill all men here in this war and why must I listen to you?”
To which Krishna replies, “Oh Arjuna, the righteous one, the ones that I am asking you to kill are not the righteous ones. They stand attached to an unrighteous throne of Hastinapur (the Kingdom) and they are not going to be dead even if you kill them, because each of these has a self or Atman, which is beyond any injury or grief. Look there Partha (Arjuna’s other name) you are refusing to fight this battle, even though you are a born warrior. Your duty is to fight a war if needed for the justice you promised to your people. You cannot run away from your duty.”
Krishna goes on to explain more to Arjuna thus, “Arjuna, look here, is another plane of consciousness called ‘my time’, I am now making you see my Cosmic Self to you, from where, we could see the battle field. Drop all your attachments to the physical realm and come unto my cosmic being, look from my point of view. See there, you just accepted to my asking you to kill all those who are unrighteous, regardless of what they are and how they are related to your being. Look further down there, Arjuna, you are seeing that you have now killed each of those unrighteous persons, who wage this great war with you and your brothers, Paandavas.”
In the next loop of time, Krishna shows Arjuna again, “Look there, Partha, you have also succumbed to your old age now. There is no way you can escape death and you are now going to die as well. So are all of your four illustrious brothers. Now you will see that even I, as Krishna leave this body and I am merged into my own Supreme Reality. Come unto me unencumbered. This is the Golden Spiral of time that I show you now. There are many here in this battle field who are more capable than you to see these things and more deserving, yet I choose you to see this. I am able to show you this, because ‘I am Time’ for me to see these things and modify anything from a fraction of a second to a million year is an easy task.”
Arjuna, when shown the Golden Spiral, could not keep his gaze at Krishna’s cosmic Self and then bows to Krishna and says, “Oh Krishna, if you want me to wage a war, I shall do that. If you want me to kill my own people, who are unrighteous, I shall do that too. If you want me to do anything on this earth I shall do that for you, but please don’t show me your cosmic self ever again to me, as I am not capable enough to gaze at that for even a moment in earthly time. Please come down to my mundane state and let me fight this war to be remembered as the greatest humankind shall ever witness.”
During the course of a fierce battle being fought between the Kauravas and Paandavas, there comes a situation, when Krishna’s being non-committal to either side of the warring groups brings him to a situation, where in his scripted outcomes seem to be threatened by great opponents like Bheeshma, Karana, Jayadritha, Shakuni, Dusshaasana, Jaraasandha, Keechaka, Shishupaala and Duryodhana. All these were great warriors, who could challenge Krishna’s guile before the war started, during and after the war was over too.
Krishna, again shows his mastery over ‘Time’ as he knows from a certain planetary combination that on a particular day during the war, would come a total solar eclipse. This was the day immediately after, the Kauravas brutally kill a young Abhimanyu, son of Arjuna. Krishna, knew exactly how Abhimanyu would be killed by looking into future at the time of the latter’s birth. He in fact tells Abhimanyu’s mother, Subhadra, “I see that this boy will go into the history books as a great warrior and he will be the first real casualty, in a great war that is to begin soon. The thing is, even I cannot stop this as it serves a great purpose of mine and the righteous ones called Paandavas.”
After that Abhimanyu is killed and Arjuna vows to avenge his death by killing Jayadratha, the chief architect of Abhimanyu’s death before sunset on that particular day, when only Krishna knew there shall be a total solar eclipse.
Krishna tells Arjuna, “Arjuna, there is only one way to take out Jayadratha. You must announce to the enemies that you shall take out Jayadrataha before sunset today. The Kauravas will hide him away and you should also announce that if you fail to kill him by evening today, then you will kill yourself.” The Kauravas bought this deceptive idea of Lord Krishna and they hid Jayadratha for the entire day and Arjuna couldn’t find him till very late evening and soon sun started to set. Of course, it only seemed to have set completely and they brought Jayadratha out of hiding and Arjuna was being told to kill himself.
As the Kauravas were rejoicing the defeat of Arjuna, Krishna suddenly pointed to the sky and showed to all in the battle field that the sun had not yet set, but it was only hidden behind something. So he ordered Arjuna to pick up his bow and arrow and shoot Jayadratha to death, immediately as the sun started to move away from the eclipse.
Arjuna killed Jayadratha and then posed a question to Krishna, “ My dear lord, how did you know that there is going to be a total Solar eclipse on this day, because this is not even a new moon day today, yet?” To this Krishna replied, “Arjuna when you become time, yourself, you don’t need to have a perfect new moon for you to create an eclipse on the fourteenth day of moon’s waxing on waning. Since all this happens within my cosmic being, I can make these finer adjustments deftly and without much difficulty. I am the Golden Spiral, where in many individual souls presume to be floating in linear and cyclic time of their own making. Yet they don’t remember that all that happens can and must happen only when I will it. The Golden Spiral is neither cyclic nor linear, neither complete nor incomplete, it is a continuum. All that is material and Spiritual in the entire multi-verse emanate from Me, The Golden Spiral."
“When I come into being, Arjuna, you don’t exist anymore. You are just a speck in the Great Golden Spiral. The very thought that you exist, is an original thought of mine and is just duplicated by you and millions of great Souls like you. There is no living or non-living thing that doesn’t emanate from me and doesn’t have me in them. Everything is my own essence and all that is, is me.”
Krishna also shows such a Golden Spiral to his mother who brought him up as a young child. Yashoda, who loved Krishna a lot, never could understand what her son was made of. After Devaki delivers Krishna in the prison, in Kamsa’s kingdom, Vasudeva is liberated of his shackles by the divine and all the prison guards are put into a mysterious sleep by the divine. Vasudeva then takes the young Krishna, in a small basket and crosses the river Yamuna and escapes to the other city, where he leaves Krishna in the care of Yashoda and Nanda.
One day, as Krishna was caught by a neighbor lady, stealing butter at her home, she comes to complain to Yashoda about Krishna’s mischief. Yashoda asks Krishna to open his mouth to see if he had eaten any butter. Krishna opens his mouth wide and as Yashoda takes a deeper look into his widely open mouth she sees another world inside and another Krishna and a mother taking a deeper look into his mouth and yet another and so on. This was the first instance that Krishna gives a clear indication that we are all multidimensional beings, co-existing simultaneously in the ‘here and now’ on all planes of consciousness.
Another character, a very important one in the epic of Ramayana, was Hanuman. Hanuman was born out of ‘thin air’ and was probably a Miscegenate as well. He could expand his body to any size or contract to a miniscule body as well. He could swim across an ocean or fly across the sky without any airplane. He was obviously another very powerful being. He performs deeds of great strength and supernatural in the entire episode of Ramayana, all done for his master, Lord Rama, an incarnate of Vishnu in the Indian mythologies.
After the war was over and Rama returned to the city of Ayodhya he ruled for several years and then finally came a time when he had to leave his mortal body as well. Hanuman goes to a mountain in south India and meditates peacefully, until he gets a telepathic message from Rama about his proposed departure from earth. Hanuman reaches Rama in a flash and asks Lord, "What about your plans to take me with you? Have I not served you well enough for me to remain here on this mortal world and not be with you, wherever you go?”
Rama, replies to this thus, "Oh great one, Hanuman, you are very wise and innocent as well. Your great service to me and humankind shall not go unrewarded. But you still have one last task to complete in behalf of me, on this planet.” Rama then takes out his ring from his left hand and gives to Hanuman saying, “Hanuman, take this ring of mine. You know how dear this is to me, as you took it to give it to my beloved Seeta while she was held a captivate by Ravana in Sri Lanka.” Hanuman pondered for a moment and asked Rama, “Lord, what shall I do with this ring, when you shall not be here anymore?”
Rama said, “Oh Dear One, I am always with you in your heart. Never should you feel that I am away from you. Just do me this last favor. Take this ring to a great sage who shall appear after thousands of years on this very planet. You are the only one capable to do this great task for me. Please hand over this ring to that great one who shall appear when the time is right. Also Hanuman, as I am aware of your loyalty to me and your anger too, I ask you to just obey me and hand over the ring and not wage a war with anyone for this reason. This planet has seen and tolerated many wars for her to be in great pain for her children. So please just hand over the ring and go back to your meditative state on the mountains.”
Hanuman, who had been blessed by Seeta to have a body and mind to be ageless, took the ring and went back to meditate. Hanuman meditated for thousands of years before his concentration was distracted a bit and he followed the vibration that triggered him to wake up from his deep state of meditation. He came to see who was now walking this planet that could possibly be as powerful as that. He reached the battle field of Mahabharata, which was being fought under the able guidance of Krishna. So he looked at Krishna and guessed, “This must be the person, that Rama asked me to hand over the ring to.” He then asked Rama in his heart, “Is this the one, I am supposed to hand over your ring?”
Rama replied, “Hanuman you truly meditate very deeply. You have even forgotten me. That person you see is Krishna, my own incarnate. Go seek his blessings. But no, he is not the one you have to hand over the ring to." Subsequently Hanuman seeks Krishna’s blessings and goes back to his meditation in the mountains. He went for many thousands of years again and was disturbed from that once again by the presence of another very powerful being that had just arrived on earth. Hanuman sought his inner Rama and asked again, “Is that the one you want me to hand over this ring of yours?”
Rama said, “No. Hanuman, that is Gautama Buddha. Not him. You have to wait for many more years.” Hanuman went back to meditation in the mountains and is probably still meditating. But soon, one fine day, as he sees that earth has been annihilated many times and fresh vegetation and animals sprout to inhibit the earth again, he feels a very powerful vibration draw his attention once again.
Hanuman searched all around the jungles and finally found a small hermitage. He reached there and encounters the hermit who sat there in meditation and a small water pot in front of him (called the Kamandala in Sanskrit). Hanuman approached the ascetic and queried, “Are you the one for whom my Lord Rama has sent me to hand over this ring?”
The person, who sat there in silence, just spoke through his powerful eyes. He gestured Hanuman to sit and then slowly beckoned him to put the ring into the Kamandala. Hanuman, as he was a powerful being himself, felt that his ego was being challenged and hence he felt anger build up inside him as the man in front of him was acting with disrespect towards his master, Lord Rama. He told the sage, “Lord Rama has sent me and he has asked me to just follow his orders and not wage a war. I am compelled to stay calm otherwise with the indifference you are acting with towards my master and his message I would have killed you in no time.”
The man in front of Hanuman was unmoved. Very calm as he sat there, he still gestured hanuman to put the ring inside the Kamandala and go away. Hanuman was furious. But he exercised some patience. Finally, the sage spoke and he told Hanuman this, “Hanuman, you are a good servant of your master. You are doing exactly as you have been instructed by him. Likewise, I am also doing my duty to the best of my ability. I don’t know how to guide you further either you put that ring into the Kamandala in front of me here or please go away.” Hanuman wanted to test the might of the sage before he took any such action.
So, with his mystical powers that Hanuman was known for, he increased the size of the ring to something bigger than that of the Kamandala. The sage knew that Hanuman was capable of that. So he quietly told Hanuman, “If you feel this bowl is too small for the ring, then please take a walk behind my hut and find a very ancient well there. Just drop the ring inside that well and go away.” Hanuman thought he should take a look at this well. He walked to the rear side of the hut and found the ancient well.
Hanuman looked into the well, he was stunned and stood there for many moments as he saw thousands of such rings lying inside that well. All had the same qualities that the ring in his hands had. All were from Lord Rama as he recognized his master’s trademark. This whole episode shook Hanuman up and he walked back to the front of the hut to find that sage again. But to his dismay, nobody was there. So Hanuman dropped the ring into the well and walked away back to the mountain where he is still meditating.
But, as he walked back, he asked his inner Rama, “Rama, my lord, what was all that? Was that some kind of a game? What was it that you wanted me to see? Was that man you, yourself? Tell me why these things are being shown to me this way?” Rama replied, “Hanuman, you are wrong to think that it was me. That man wasn’t me at all. Hanuman, did you not recognize that person?” So Hanuman pondered a moment and then asked again, “Lord Rama, if it was not you, then it surely must have been Lord Shiva, the ever pervading yogi of the cosmos?” Then Rama asked him to rethink.
Hanuman pondered for a while and then asked, “Rama, are you suggesting that it wasn’t even Shiva?” Rama said, “Yes Hanuman, it wasn’t anybody other than you. What you just witnessed was the Golden Spiral of time and space. You met yourself, because you served me very well, I am your higher self and your lower self was serving me for all this while, without the egoistic need to know who you actually were. I wanted to reward you adequately when the time was right. So, I devised this Golden Spiral for you to walk in this for Millions of years to experience what is the most wonderful for any soul to experience. You are a blessed soul, Hanuman.” And then Rama also vanished and Hanuman went back to his meditative state in the mountains and is still in that state.
Among the five righteous brothers known as Paandavas in Mahabharata, was Bheema, a known Giant. In one of the most important episodes of this great epic, Bheema encounters a female Miscegenate in the jungles of south India, known as Hidimba. She falls in love with Bheema and thus their act of love creates a miscegenated child called Ghatotkachha, who performs many actions of super natural during the war. This was definitely a clear case of DNA re-patterning methods applied at that time. Ghatotkachha was the first casualty of a nuclear weapon fired by another miscegenate named Karana, eldest son of Kunti, the Pandava queen who conceived him, as a result of having sexual intercourse with Sun-god.
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