Nageshwar Mahadev, Shiva Temple, Gujarat Author: Emmanuel DYAN from Paris, Francelicensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 2. 0 Generic license. Via Wikimedia Commons. MAHASHIVRATRI:. ​The Night of the Great Awakening. ​While most festivals ...
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"SURiMOUNT" - 5 new articles

  1. TOPIC OF THE DAY : NIGHT OF THE GREAT AWAKENING
  2. ​FASCINATING FACTS: WHY THE UNIVERSE IS OBSESSED WITH HEXAGONS
  3. TOPIC OF THE DAY: VALENTINE'S DAY
  4. SELF-IMPROVEMENT
  5. A THOUGHT FOR TODAY
  6. More Recent Articles

TOPIC OF THE DAY : NIGHT OF THE GREAT AWAKENING

Nageshwar Mahadev, Shiva Temple, Gujarat 
Author: 
Emmanuel DYAN from Paris, France
licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 2.0 Generic license.
Via Wikimedia Commons

MAHASHIVRATRI:.
​The Night of the Great Awakening

​While most festivals are celebrated with dance and feast, Mahashivaratri is unique. It is a festival of the dark, of stillness, and of an inward journey. For the seeker on a spiritual quest, this isn't just a religious date—it is a celestial window of opportunity.

​Why This Night?

​Scientifically and spiritually, the positioning of the planets on this night is said to create a natural upsurge of energy within the human system. It is the darkest night of the year, yet it holds the greatest potential for illumination.

​In the yogic tradition, Shiva is not just a deity but the Adiyogi (the first yogi)—the source of all stillness. On this night, we celebrate his marriage to Parvati: the union of Purusha (consciousness) and Prakriti (nature).

​Tuning the Senses: From Outward to Inward

​In our daily lives, our senses are like windows thrown wide open to a noisy street. We are constantly "tuned" to the external world. Mahashivaratri is the ultimate practice in sensory withdrawal (Pratyahara).
​The Power of the Vigil (Jagran): Staying awake and upright is more than a tradition; it’s about keeping the spine—the highway of your nervous system—aligned to allow energy to flow upward.

​The Silence of Shunya: By fasting or maintaining silence (Mauna), we stop feeding the external senses and begin to listen to the "unstruck sound" within.

​Three Ways to Celebrate on Spiritual Quest

​Embrace the Stillness: Set aside at least 20 minutes for midnight meditation. Visualize your breath as a thread connecting you to the infinite.

​The "Vertical" Posture: Try to keep your spine erect throughout the night. It symbolizes the bridge between the earthly and the divine.

​Chanting as Resonance: The mantra Om Namah Shivaya isn't just a name; it’s a vibration. Let it resonate in your chest until you aren't saying the mantra—you are the mantra.

​"Shiva is that which is not, yet that which is everything. He is the vast emptiness from which all creation springs."

​As we move through this Great Night, let’s stop trying to "find" the divine and start becoming still enough for the divine to find us.

​Happy Mahashivaratri to all the seekers out there!

Grateful thanks to Google Gemini for its great help and support in creating this blogpost !🙏
   

​FASCINATING FACTS: WHY THE UNIVERSE IS OBSESSED WITH HEXAGONS

Hexagons are truly nature’s "perfect" shape, and they make for a captivating subject for Fascinating Facts.

​Drawing from the principles of efficiency and geometry found in the natural world, here is an engaging blog post

​FASCINATING FACTS: 
WHY THE UNIVERSE IS OBSESSED WITH HEXAGONS 

​Have you ever stopped to notice how often the number six pops up in nature? From the microscopic structure of a snowflake to the vast, swirling storms on distant planets, the hexagon isn't just a shape—it’s the universe’s favorite "hack" for total efficiency.

​In the world of geometry, the hexagon is the undisputed heavyweight champion. Here is why this six-sided wonder is the "default setting" for reality.

​1. The Geometry of "Work Smarter, Not Harder"

​If you want to cover a flat surface with identical shapes without leaving any gaps (a process called tiling or tessellation), you only have three choices: equilateral triangles, squares, or hexagons.

​Among these, the hexagon is the most efficient. It uses the least amount of "perimeter" to enclose the most "area." This means if you are building something, a hexagonal structure gives you the most space using the least amount of material.

​2. Architecture from the Hive

​Bees are master mathematicians, but they don't use calculators. They use physics. By building hexagonal honeycombs, bees can store the maximum amount of honey while using the minimum amount of precious wax [00:36]. If they used circles, there would be wasted gaps; if they used squares, the corners wouldn't be as structurally sound. Evolution simply doesn't negotiate with inefficiency!

​3. Cosmic Hexagons: Saturn’s Great Mystery

​Perhaps the most mind-blowing hexagon isn't on Earth at all. At the North Pole of the planet Saturn, there is a permanent cloud pattern shaped like a near-perfect hexagon. This massive storm is wider than Earth itself [00:10]. Without any physical walls to guide it, the atmospheric gases have snapped into six straight lines, spinning at 200 mph—a testament to how energy naturally stabilizes into this specific geometry 

​4. Strength in Small Packages

​The hexagon’s power continues down to the atomic level. Carbon atoms often link up in hexagonal rings to form Graphene.

 Graphene is only one atom thick, making it nearly transparent, yet it is significantly stronger than steel. 

When the universe needs something to be incredibly light but virtually unbreakable, it reaches for the hexagon.

​5. It’s Everywhere You Look

​Once you start looking for hexagons, you can’t "un-see" them:
​Snowflakes: Every single snowflake has six-fold symmetry because of how water molecules crystallize.
​Your Eyes: Even human biology joins the club; many of the light-receptor cells in our eyes are packed in hexagonal patterns to maximize visual coverage.

​Basalt Columns: 

When lava cools and contracts, it often cracks into giant hexagonal pillars, like those seen at the Giant’s Causeway.

​The Bottom Line

​The hexagon is what reality defaults to when it wants to do the most with the least.

 It is the intersection of art, physics, and pure economy.

​Tuning In: Just as the universe finds balance through geometry, we can find our own "hexagonal" efficiency through mindfulness. Next time you see a hexagon, let it be a reminder to find the path of least resistance and maximum stability in your own day.

Grateful thanks to Google Gemini for its great help and support in creating this blogpost!🙏
   

TOPIC OF THE DAY: VALENTINE'S DAY


TOPIC OF THE DAY: VALENTINE'S DAY 
Valentine’s Day: Beyond Roses and Romance

Every year on February 14, the world turns red.
Shop windows glow with heart-shaped décor.

 Florists work overtime. Restaurants fill up. Social media overflows with messages of love. But behind the chocolates, candlelight dinners, and greeting cards lies a story far deeper than modern romance.

Valentine’s Day is not just about couples. It is about love in all its forms — romantic, familial, friendly, and even self-love.

The Man Behind the Day

The origins of Valentine’s Day trace back to ancient Rome and a mysterious figure known as Saint Valentine.

Legend says he defied Emperor Claudius II, who had banned marriages for young soldiers, believing single men made better warriors. Valentine secretly performed weddings, valuing love over imperial orders. For this act of defiance, he was executed on February 14.

Over centuries, this solemn remembrance transformed into a celebration of affection. 

By the Middle Ages, poets like Geoffrey Chaucer romanticized the day, linking it with courtly love. What began as a story of courage evolved into a global celebration.

From Handwritten Notes to Global Industry

In the 19th century, Valentine’s Day cards became popular in Europe and America. Today, the day fuels a multibillion-dollar global industry — flowers, jewelry, travel packages, digital gifts, and more.

But commercialization often overshadows the essence.

Love cannot be measured by the price of a gift. A handwritten note, a phone call to an old friend, or simply spending time with family can carry more meaning than a diamond necklace.

Love in the Indian Context

In India, Valentine’s Day sparks mixed reactions. Urban youth celebrate with enthusiasm, while traditionalists sometimes view it as a Western import. Yet the idea of love is deeply rooted in Indian culture.

From the timeless devotion of Radha and Krishna to the passionate poetry of classical Tamil Sangam literature, India has always celebrated love — openly and artistically.

Perhaps Valentine’s Day is not foreign after all. 

Perhaps it is simply a modern expression of an ancient human emotion.

The Expanding Meaning of Love

In recent years, the day has evolved. It is no longer limited to romantic partners. Schools celebrate friendship. Families exchange tokens of affection. Many people use the day to practice self-care — a reminder that loving oneself is not selfish but necessary.
In a world often marked by conflict, loneliness, and digital distance, Valentine’s Day offers something rare: a conscious pause to express appreciation.
And that pause matters.

Beyond February 14

The true spirit of Valentine’s Day lies not in a single date but in daily acts of kindness — listening without distraction, forgiving past hurts, appreciating small gestures, and expressing gratitude.

Love is not loud. It is patient. It is persistent. It is powerful.

Perhaps the real question this Valentine’s Day is not “What gift should I buy?” but “Have I told the people in my life that they matter?”

Because in the end, love — in all its forms — remains humanity’s greatest strength.

Grateful thanks to ChatGPT for its great help and support in creating this blogpost 🙏


   

SELF-IMPROVEMENT

A THOUGHT FOR TODAY


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