A visit between Dawn to Dusk! A visit to all three Ranganatha Swamy Temples on the same day between sunrise and sunset! Aren’t you excited right now to go on Triranga Darshan in one day! It is believed a visit to three Sriranganatha Swamy temples between dawn to dusk called “Triranga Darshan”
Bharathiyam was first conceived on March 14, 2000, as a seed idea — long before India’s cultural heritage found a home online. Though the domain was registered on that very day, its deeper blossoming required 25 years of experience, inner churning, and karmic purification.
Every civilization is born, grows, declines, and often disappears into the pages of history. Yet Bharat, the land sanctified by rishis, rivers, and the rhythm of Sanātana Dharma, stands apart. It is not merely a civilization of the past but a living continuum that has nourished countless generations, adapting to time yet never losing its eternal pulse.
Spiritual Movement Spiritual Movements – The Living Rivers of Awakening From the hymns of the Vedas to the songs of the saints, Bharat’s spiritual history flows through countless movements of love, wisdom, and inner transformation. Each age gave birth to seekers who re-discovered the timeless truth — that divinity lives within every heart.
My personal message is about the journey that shaped me, the lessons life taught me, and the realisations that pushed me back onto my own path. Every word you read here is mine — written from my own experiences, my own struggles, and the truths I discovered along the way.
Struggles and happiness are a part of life. If you don’t struggle, you won’t learn anything. If you don’t enjoy happiness, you won’t feel its essence. Both are just two sides of the same coin. Sometimes life feels like you’re swimming against the waves… but it’s only when you swim against the waves that you realise your own strength.
In a quiet hermitage at the edge of a forest, a young yogi once asked his teacher, “Master, how do I know when my mind has truly become still?”
The teacher took the disciple to a small shrine. Inside, a single oil lamp burned before a sacred image. The air was utterly still. The flame stood upright, unwavering, its golden light filling the room with calm.
“Watch the lamp,” said the teacher.
The disciple sat in silence. Minutes passed — the flame did not move. The teacher spoke softly:
“When the lamp of the mind stands like this — neither shaken by desire nor fear, neither reaching outward nor retreating inward — then know that you have touched the Self.”
Outside, a breeze began to blow, and the flame wavered. “See,” said the teacher, “the wind is thought. When thoughts arise, the flame dances. Still the wind, and the light reveals what was always there.”
Translation: “As a lamp in a windless place does not flicker, so is the mind of the yogi steady in meditation upon the Self.”
🌿 The Symbols Explained
Symbol
Meaning
The Lamp
The mind or inner awareness.
The Flame
The light of consciousness, the presence of the Self.
The Wind
Thoughts, emotions, desires, and sensory distractions.
The Shrine or Still Air
The state of inner silence, created by discipline and devotion.
✨ The Inner Meaning
The lamp symbolizes the mind refined by practice. Ordinarily, our minds are like lamps in the open wind — constantly flickering with impulses, worries, memories, and cravings. Even a whisper of thought disturbs the light of awareness.
Through meditation (dhyāna), restraint (yama), and devotion (bhakti), the yogi learns to protect the flame — creating within a “windless place.” When the mind becomes still, the light of the Self shines effortlessly, revealing a peace that is not created — only uncovered.
This is not the silence of suppression, but of presence. The world continues — sounds, sensations, life — but the flame remains unmoved.
🪶 The Yogic Insight
Patañjali’s Yoga Sūtras describe this very state:
“Yogas citta-vṛtti-nirodhaḥ.” — Yoga Sūtra 1.2 “Yoga is the cessation of the fluctuations of the mind.”
When the ripples subside, the lake reflects the sky perfectly. When the mind becomes still, the Infinite reflects within as pure awareness.
The goal of every practice — mantra, pranayama, seva, or silence — is to reach this steadiness. Not by force, but by surrender. Not by fleeing the world, but by being fully present in it without disturbance.
🕯️ Reflections for Modern Life
Our modern life is full of wind — constant noise, scrolling, comparison, urgency. Our lamps flicker with every message, every opinion, every anxiety. We seek peace by changing the world, yet the wind comes from within.
The teaching of the lamp shows us a different path: To make a windless place inside ourselves — a space of awareness that no storm can reach.
Meditation is not an escape; it is a return. When the inner lamp burns steadily, we act, speak, and live from clarity. Then even amidst the winds of the world, the flame of peace remains unshaken.
📜 Scriptural Echoes
Katha Upanishad (6.10–11): “When the five senses and the mind are still, and the intellect rests in silence, that, say the wise, is the highest state.”
Bhagavad Gītā (6.20–21): “When the mind, restrained by practice, attains quietude, and seeing the Self by the self, is satisfied in the Self alone.”
Mundaka Upanishad (2.2.9): “The Self cannot be reached by restless minds, but only by those whose thoughts are subdued, whose hearts are pure, and who see the Divine everywhere.”
🌼 The Message
“The mind is the lamp; the Self is its flame. Protect it from the winds of desire, and it will reveal the Divine.”
Peace is not the absence of motion, but the presence of stillness within motion. When one’s awareness ceases to flicker between past and future, pleasure and pain, one abides in the eternal now — luminous and serene.
Such a person lives in the world yet remains untouched, like a lamp glowing silently in a windless shrine.
🌺 The Essence
This is the culmination of all parables:
The man hanging from the tree learns that worldly sweetness fades.
The two birds discover the witness Self.
The chariot teaches discipline.
The rope and snake reveal right seeing.
The city of nine gates shows inner purity.
The traveler and mirage exposes the futility of outer seeking.
The river and ocean complete the union.
And now — the lamp in the windless place signifies the state of living realization.
The journey ends not in silence, but in luminous awareness — steady, still, infinite. That light is the Self — eternal, pure, blissful, and unshaken by the winds of samsara.
“When you are born with a question in your soul, the answer becomes your life’s work.”
Venkatesham is the founder and guiding spirit behind Bharathiyam — a digital dharmic initiative dedicated to reviving, preserving, and sharing the timeless soul-wisdom of Bharat.
Born into a traditional family rooted in simplicity, reverence, and moral strength, his life bridges two worlds — the outer world of technology and digital communication, and the inner world of silence, reflection, and spiritual seeking.
The articles and essays featured on Bharathiyam are not recent creations, but part of a lifelong body of work that began more than two decades ago. Many of them were originally written between 2000 and 2020, stored quietly as Word documents — reflections, insights, and learnings collected through years of sādhanā, study, and service. These writings are now being published in their original spirit, dated according to when they were first composed.
Alongside Bharathiyam, he continues to nurture two interconnected literary trilogies exploring dharma, family, and the soul’s journey — expressions of the same inner quest that began long ago and continues to unfold through his work and life.