A maternal uncle's love for his nephews is true love. And also equal for all his nephews. Amazing!!
Krishna was born to teach maternal uncle Kansa a lesson for not being like that.
. . . . and the foundation of the epic of Mahabharata was laid.
And here is the link to Ramayana. My thoughts. http://theotherday-kirtivasan.blogspot.com/2018/07/devas-monkeys-and-not-so-humans.html?m=1
Krishna was born to teach maternal uncle Kansa a lesson for not being like that.
. . . . and the foundation of the epic of Mahabharata was laid.
And here is the link to Ramayana. My thoughts. http://theotherday-kirtivasan.blogspot.com/2018/07/devas-monkeys-and-not-so-humans.html?m=1
5 comments:
It was bhagwan who told Vasudev to exchange infant Krishna with the girl child of Yashoda and Nanda.
A mother realises about feeding baby. It is her karma.
Devaki, Vasudev, Yashoda and Nanda were doing duties as per their bhagwan wishes.
A child needs time to grow and be skilled.
Men having gynecomastia take time to come into terms with real needs.
The role of mammary glands. The needs of time.
A true love needs understanding of times.
The power of distinction is important.
The focus.
The sybolism of pi.
The symbols.
Perhaps a mother feeds her baby to give the baby a power of distinction.
Perhaps Krishna developed this power of distinction quickly and killed Putana who tried to feed poisoned milk.
True love is left out when power of distinction advances.
Many may blame a man suffering from gynecomastia to be of evil intentions.
They need to read Mahabharata.
Much more than that they need to develop symbolism strength.
The power of distinction
The power of distinction is most important.
Mammary glands is about power of distinction. So is my claim.
Symbols like vibhuti(shiva), namam(vishnu),cross(jesus) or pi or gamma are to stress the power of distinction.
When power of distinction improves true love is left out. So I claim.
My future comments hereafter are based on above principles.
Keep reading . . .
Further comments are sikhs supported statements. Power of distinction indeed. Joke !!
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