Ganesh

⁂

Kiana Khansmith
Xuebing Du

titsay
Jules of Nature
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me

★
cherry valley forever

祝日 / Permanent Vacation
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"
occasionally subtle

#extradirty
No title available

Janaina Medeiros
will byers stan first human second
Alisa U Zemlji Chuda

Love Begins
ojovivo
hello vonnie
Peter Solarz
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@numinousweb
Ganesh
Mirabai Worships Krishna India Vintage Print (via eBay: Indian Allegory @allegory003)
Young Shiva (via Etsy: EasternImage)
Draupadi and the Pandavas worshipping Lord Shiva Pandavas visit Kedarnath after Mahabharata war. Mahabharata Tej Kumar Book Depot Mahavir Prasad Mishra. (via Wikipedia.org)
It is becoming more and more important if we are to survive that there be a spirit of cooperation with the universe, with all the things of the sea and earth.
Jiddu Krishnamurti
Lakshmi, tamjore painting by Meena Ganesh
Yr Dead, Sam Sax
Tove Ditlevsen, from a poem featured in There Lives a Young Girl in Me Who Will Not Die: Selected Poems
debilidad
Varaha and his consort Bhumi
Varaha (Sanskrit: वराह, Varāha, "boar") is one avatar of the Hindu god Vishnu, in the form of a boar. Varaha is generally listed as third in the Dashavatara, the ten principal avataras of Vishnu.
Varaha lifts the earth goddess Bhumi out of the cosmic ocean when the demon Hiranyaksha stole the earth goddess and hid her in the primordial waters. Vishnu appeared as Varaha to rescue her. Varaha killed Hiranyaksha and retrieved the earth goddess from the cosmic ocean, lifting it on his tusks, and restored her to her place in the universe.
Varaha in a coital posture with Bhumi in the Venugopalasvami temple, Sathyamangalam
A 3rd century CE sandstone statue of Varaha holding his consort Bhumi, Art of Mathura, housed in LACMA.
Varaha with his consort Bhumi, a copper statue from Tamil Nadu, 1600 CE.
Scene from the Thai version of the Ramayana - the Ramakien - Vishnu (Witsanu) transforms into a boar to kill the demon Hiranyaksha (Hiranta) who curls the earth up in an attempt to take over the world.
Varaha battles the demon Hiranyaksha, Scene from the ''Bhagavata Purana'' by Manaku of Guler (c. 1740)
Varaha killing Hiranyaksha and saving Bhumi, 1740 CE, Chamba painting
Varaha rescuing the earth, c. 1720-50
Varaha depicted as a Dashavatar in a modern temple in Srikakulam. Varaha holds the earth as a globe.
Varaha tramples the killed demon Hiranyaksha with Bhumi on his shoulder, Hoysaleshvara Temple.
Zoomorphic Varaha, Khajuraho. On its body are carved saints, sages, gods, seven mothers and numerous beings which he symbolically protects. The goddess earth is ruined and missing.
A rare right-facing Varaha holding Bhudevi, 7th century CE, Mahabalipuram.
The Varaha panel in Cave 5, Udyagiri Caves, is one of the most studied reliefs from the Gupta Empire era. Circa 400 CE, reign of Chandragupta II.
Coin with Varaha on a Gurjara-Pratihara coin possibly from the reign of King Mihira Bhoja, 850–900 CE, British Museum.
Varaha as the left head in the Vaikuntha Chaturmurti icon of Vishnu. Mathura, Gupta period, mid-5th century CE. Boston Museum.
Varaha with his consort on his lap, worshipped as a subsidiary deity in the Sundaravarada Perumal temple dedicated to Vishnu.
Print from the Ravi Udaya Vijaya Press of Raja Ravi varma painting
Varaha appears either as completely a boar or in an anthropomorphic form, with a boar's head and the human body. His consort, Bhumi, the earth goddess, is either depicted as a female deity or as the planet earth.
Parvati and Ganesha, Bengal
Ganesha by Nabajyoti Basak, Bengal
Terracotta head of Viṣṇu
Eastern India, 5th century CE, Gupta period.
"Truth is one; the wise call it by various names."
~ Rig Veda
—Adi Shankara's introduction to The Aitareya Upanishad
—Valarie Kaur, See No Stranger: A Memoir and Manifesto of Revolutionary Love