Festival of lights… with Spock tonight 🕎🖖 (Sparkle Motion test 0.4a)
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Festival of lights… with Spock tonight 🕎🖖 (Sparkle Motion test 0.4a)
Ayodhya sets Guinness World Record with 25 lakh diyas lit and 1,121 Vedacharyas performing aarti together.
Ayodhya set 2 Guinness World Records one record was of most people performing aarti simultaneously and the other record was the largest display of oil lamps. The counting of oil lamps were done using drones!
Subh Deepavali
THE HAPPIEST PEOPLE DO NOT HAVE THE BEST OF EVERYTHING- THEY MAKE THE BEST OUT OF EVERYTHING. 🎄🕯️❤️
They say Diwali is the festival of lights. But is it just about the lamps and the fireworks? For me it is a celebration of triumph, of good over evil, wisdom over ignorance.
Even if you don’t celebrate Diwali yourself, its message speaks to something we all experience. At its heart, Diwali is about light overcoming darkness. But this isn’t just about lighting candles or watching fireworks, it’s about the light within us. The darkness isn’t some evil force outside, it’s the parts of ourselves we often ignore:
laziness,
selfishness,
misunderstanding,
and forgetfulness.
Think about your daily life. Maybe you’ve had moments where you’ve felt overwhelmed, by pressure or by expectations; by your friendships, or just trying to keep up with it all.
Maybe you’ve said something you didn’t mean, or held onto a grudge longer than you should have. Maybe you’ve felt like you are just ‘going through the motions’, forgetting why you’re doing any of it at all.
Diwali reminds us to wake up from that forgetfulness. It’s a chance to reset and remember. To clean out not just our rooms and homes, but also our minds. To let go of what’s weighing us down and make space for what lifts us up.
And so, the story of Diwali is a reminder that even in the deepest night, the smallest flame can guide us home. Diwali is also a reminder not to let the darkness win. And the darkness is within each of us. But so is the light. Your path maybe different. You may follow another faith, or none at all. But, in the end, light is light. But Diwali is about the light that survives in the darkness. And it belongs to all of us.
Hey everyone! We just dropped a fresh wallpaper on Wallpapers Monster: Vibrant Diwali Street Art in 8K. Dive into a luminous urban mural where warm yellows and oranges meet electric purples and midnight blues. Glowing diyas drift along the wall, and a serene temple rests at the end of the lane, all painted with bold strokes and shimmering highlights. The 8K detail brings tiny brushwork and festive glow to life, perfect for desktop or phone backgrounds. On a desktop, the art feels like a cinematic mural with a cozy halo around the lamps; on mobile, the deep gradient stays rich and readable while still feeling immersive. Created by us to brighten your screen and mood. Explore a festival of color, light, and calm in one striking image.
Vibrant Diwali Street Art in 8K wallpaper
What do you think of this wallpaper? Where would you use it on your devices?
You know what I love most about Diwali? It’s not just the lights or the sweets (though I won’t say no to those!), it’s the message behind it! Every diya reminds us that even the tiniest light can chase away darkness. So this Diwali, let’s shine with kindness, gratitude, and hope, because the world needs a little more light, and it starts with us. Happy Diwali friends ❤️🙏🏻.
🕎 Happy Hanukkah! 2025 🕎
As winter settles in and the nights grow longer, Hanukkah arrives as a quiet but powerful reminder that light still wins. The Festival of Lights is not about spectacle or excess; it’s about remembrance, resilience, and faith carried forward one flame at a time.
Hanukkah tells an ancient story of perseverance. A small people, a threatened faith, and a miracle that came not through abundance, but through faithfulness. One day’s worth of oil burned for eight. That alone should stop us in our tracks. In a world obsessed with having more, Hanukkah teaches us the power of standing firm with what is right.
Each night, as the menorah is lit, we’re reminded that light does not need permission to shine. It doesn’t argue with darkness it simply exists, and darkness retreats. Every candle represents hope, endurance, and the quiet strength of tradition passed down through generations.
This season is also about family and community. Gathering together, sharing meals, laughter, and stories these are the things that anchor us when the world feels unstable. Hanukkah doesn’t rush. It asks us to slow down, to be present, to remember who we are and where we come from.
May the glow of the menorah warm your home and steady your heart. May it remind you that miracles still happen, that faith still matters, and that even the smallest light can change everything.
Wishing you joy, peace, and steadfast hope throughout Hanukkah and into the year ahead.
Chag Sameach.
Hindu Gods celebrating Diwali (Deepavali)