Showing posts with label #InnerWar#Awakening. Show all posts
Showing posts with label #InnerWar#Awakening. Show all posts

Monday, 4 August 2025

When Gods Fight: The Hidden Battle for Balance, Power and Purpose

Have You Heard Gods Fighting?

Yes — Gods. Not mortals. Not leaders. But the archetypal forces meant to safeguard, preserve, transform and realign humanity. When they clash, it’s not for vanity. It’s for balance and moral lessons. And what unfolds is the hidden war of purpose and learning.

The Forgotten Story: Shiva (Mahadeva) and Vishnu

There is a bit of God in every living being! In the cosmic theater of Indian myth, Shiva — the supreme knowledgeable, powerful, destroyer, transformer — and Vishnu — the preserver — have often embodied tension. It is not a battle of supremacy in the petty human sense, but a conflict of power, process and priority. Who comes first: transformation or preservation? Who ignites change and who holds the rebuilt world steady for balance and stability?

The truth is that neither is whole without the other. The knowledge and fierce insight of Mahadeva, without the stabilizing continuity of Vishnu with his multiple avatars, become chaos without a legacy. Preservation without the sharp fire of transformation becomes stagnation. Their clash, when it appears, is a necessary recalibration — not to crown a victor, but to restore dharma, the cosmic order or the fundamental principles in life.

Energy Behind the Clash: Adi Shakti

And yet even divine process needs fuel. Adi Shakti — the primal feminine energy, the unseen force — is the enabler. Without her, Shiva’s dance is a corpse and Vishnu’s calm is motionless. She is the surge that makes knowledge actionable, the pulse that gives preservation purpose, the power that allows transformation to manifest. Power, wisdom, maintenance — all require Shakti. In the cosmic equation of implementation, she is not ancillary; she is the system omnipresent. 

Energy can neither be created nor destroyed.

Gods at Loggerheads, Worlds in Tremor

So, if Gods can clash to re-anchor balance, what does it mean when the world outside reflects similar ruptures? The symbolic war becomes real in geopolitics, identity struggles, ideological fractures and humanitarian breakdowns signifying the ignorance and learning scarcity amongst leaders. When the divine archetypes are invoked, misused, weaponized or forgotten, the consequences cascade. The energy that should fuel awakening is diverted into justifying violence, preserving injustice or camouflaging ego as righteousness. Who Suffers??

From Myth to Today: Operation Sindoor and the Palestinian Crisis

In May 2025, Operation Sindoor emerged as a calculated and symbolic military response by India to persistent cross-border terror activities. Despite repeated international appeals and undeniable evidence of terrorism, inaction from the perpetrators' side left little room for patience. As a result, a retaliatory strike was carried out — strategically chosen in terms of time, space and target — reflecting the leadership’s prerogative to protect national interests and assert control over the narrative. The operation’s name, “Sindoor,” carried layered meaning — signifying not only a mark of power and sacrifice, but also evoking emotional and cultural symbolism, particularly linked to honor, widowhood and loss. That brings to the point that balance is important and needs to be restored through means as deemed fit while many views may signal it as a more assertive, cost-imposition military doctrine.

At the same time, across geography, the Palestinian conflict remains a profound example of what happens when preservation, identity, historical grievance and power collide without the balancing conscience of shared humanity. The humanitarian catastrophe in Gaza — massive displacement, food insecurity and collapse of basic services — is well documented, as are the international controversies over access to aid and alleged violations of law. 

There are many such instances and historic events to tell the stories of inner fight!

Both instances are not just political; they are symbolic fault lines. They mirror the cosmic tension: when transformation (retaliation, upheaval) meets preservation (identity, territory) and the enabling energy (compassion, justice) is fragmented or absent. The healing and balancing force needs to be invoked.

The Real Battlefield

The wars we see outside — whether named, televised or whispered in policy corridors — are reflections of the inner war: between ego and consciousness, inertia and evolution, self-preservation and collective well-being. When the divine forces within humanity (the Shiva of radical insight, the Vishnu of continuity, the Shakti of mobilizing will) are out of harmony, the outer world breaks.

Which God Are We Feeding?

Every choice, every narrative we propagate, every silence we keep, adds to one of those currents. Are we feeding the Shiva that destroys false constructs for the sake of a higher truth? The Vishnu that sustains systems that uphold dignity? The Shakti that energizes integrity into action? Or are we inadvertently empowering lesser selves that masquerade as divinity — ego dressed up as purpose, power disguised as protection?

Conclusion

So, have you heard Gods fighting? Listen closely. You’ll hear it not only in war zones or newsfeeds, but in your voice when you choose silence over truth, in institutions when they preserve form over substance, in leaders when they confuse dominance for guidance. When Gods clash, it is a cosmic alarm — a call to realign, to integrate, to act with the energy that sustains balance. 

The hidden battle is not about supremacy. It is about awakening.

Disclaimer

This piece uses mythological archetypes and symbolic language to reflect on contemporary conflicts and human dynamics. The interpretations are philosophical and metaphorical in nature. The events cited—such as Operation Sindoor and the Palestinian crisis—are complex geopolitical and humanitarian situations involving real people and suffering. This blog does not endorse violence and it aims to provoke reflection, not polarization. Readers are encouraged to seek multiple perspectives and verifiable sources for their own understanding.