Guest guest Posted May 17, 2009 Report Share Posted May 17, 2009 maatru-panchakam In continuation of my earlier posting on this theme, I briefly annotate each of the 5 stanzas of Adi Sankara’s “maatru-panchakamâ€. I hope readers will derive the same delight as I have from reading this beautiful hymn in praise of not only Sankara’s mother but of Motherhood itself. (1) “aasthAm tAvadiyam prasUti samayE durvArshUla’vyayAda nairUchyE tanushOshaNam malamayee sharayyA cha sAmvatsaree I ekasyApi na garbha-bhAra bharaNa-klEsha-sasya yasyamakshamah: dAtUm nishkrutimmunanntOpi tanayah: tasyai janannyai namah: II In the throes of painful labor, O mother, You suffered much To beget me who was then but mere burden of Ugly, noxious foetal flesh To be borne long and patiently-- And so you did with loving expectation; For that one act of love --- One act and the gift of suffering, O mother, Nothing that I offer thee Shall ever suffice as fitting repayment Except eternal worship at thy feet! My brief comments: The expression “durvArshUla’vyayAda†is very significant. It is Sankara’s phrase for the “ugly, noxious†embryo that takes seed inside a mother’s womb and begins to grow for 9 long months before the moment of birth arrives when it gets to see daylight for the first time ever in life. There are 2 profound ideas this phrase evokes in the mind of the reader: (1)Firstly, during the course of the 9-month long pregnancy, a mother undergoes all kinds of pain, discomfort and bodily trials about which the foetus knows nothing at all --- not during incubation, not after birth, and not after growth into adulthood. None of us in the world can ever imagine or realize fully what a terrible physical burden we must have been to our mothers while she carried us. Our existence in our mother’s womb was unquestionably parasitical. Now, the natural biological response of any host-body to a parasite is to try rejecting and expelling it. But our beloved mothers, all through the 9-month long period of pregnancy, gave the parasite nothing but “TLC†--- tender loving care in gratuitous and spontaneous measure. One who has received an act of extraordinary favor, beneficence or kindness in life from another must never fail to show due gratitude. It is easy to feel and show proper gratitude for known or clearly recollected acts of kindness. But how is one to show due gratitude for the hundred little acts of loving kindness our mothers showered upon us during the difficult days of pregnancy --- such acts always remaining unknown to us and ever beyond possible recollection? (2) The second central idea in the stanza is this: The mother’s love for her unborn foetus is a unique one indeed. The feeling of love does not arise in the human breast unaided or in an utterly spontaneous manner, out of the void or a vacuum as it were. Love is inspired by sterling qualities --- those qualities of body, mind and heart that the lover perceives the object of love to be possessing. Romeo loved Juliet for her beauty, for instance; King Midas craved gold for its value; the average Indian cricketing fan loves Sachin Tendulkar for his genius. To love somebody or something is thus always love felt for certain palpably attractive, endearing qualities or attributes (“guNa-visEshaâ€): physical, mental, moral or intellectual. If you wish to arouse love in someone, you must necessarily possess some quality or attribute, bodily or mental, that the other will find attractive or “lovableâ€. Now, a human embryo taking shape inside the mother’s womb is nothing but an amorphous and unattractive piece of growing tissue. It has no character. It has no identity or intelligence. It has no great qualities of beauty, intelligence or virtue, nothing certainly that anyone would want to describe as endearing or attractive. The raw and clear truth is the human foetus is not exactly “lovableâ€; in a purely physical or mundane sense, it is quite grotesque and it can only arouse only feelings of queasy revulsion in everyone. Everyone except the mother. The pregnant mother alone is overwhelmed with extraordinary feelings of love overflowing towards what Sankara describes as “durvArshUla’vyayAda†--- an amorphous piece of living tissue possessing no apparent or palpable human quality even remotely “lovableâ€, “attractive†or “endearingâ€. But our mothers gave us all such extrordinary love in spite of our pathetic foetal state when we were all un-defined, attribute-less and under-embodied. At the very beginning of our earthly existence we were all indeed nothing but mere genetic speck, biological cipher and grotesque morphological monstrosity. The rest of the world would have regarded us certainly as nothing but that. Our mothers however who saw us differently and treated us differently. It is the mother who looked upon us as part of her very own flesh, blood and soul.. In our mothers’ eyes what defined and characterized us in our foetal condition and predicament was not what or how we were in that particular state but what we were going to be and how we would evolve in and through life. It is for this particular reason therefore --- the reason that our pregnant mothers gave us nothing but kindness, nurturing and soulful love when we were least “lovableâ€, least “attractive†or “endearing†in the eyes of the rest of the world--- it is for this particular reason that every one of us is born into the world so deeply and profoundly indebted to our mothers. Best Regards, Sudarshan MK Explore and discover exciting holidays and getaways with India Travel http://in.travel./ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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