Kantara: The Divine Call of Swadharma
Kantara: The Divine Call of Swadharma
Kantara is a divine forest which beckons certain individuals to do God’s work. When there is disturbance or adharma, there is always dharma hidden inside adharma. And when that hidden dharma is disturbed, avatāra happens. In this cosmic play, Guliga and Panjurli beckon; Kadubetta Shiva was empowered; Berme was born for that sacred restoration. The forest becomes the stage, and man becomes the chosen instrument.
We all are beckoned by our swadharma, our own inner law, for our abhyudaya — our growth — and for the preservation of the cosmos itself. The calling of swadharma does not come in excitement or noise, but often in the stillness of heavy boredom. That boredom is sacred — it is the pause before divine purpose speaks.
Swadharma satisfies all three: your material desire, your spiritual upliftment, and cosmic preservation. The Greeks said the same in another tongue — that each soul has its logos, its inner flame that aligns with the order of the universe. To neglect that flame is to live in shadow; to follow it is to enter your Kantara — the wilderness where your true work is revealed.
Always take your clarion call seriously. Pursue it with humility, with courage. In the great forest of existence, some are called to guard, some to heal, some to awaken. Each has a role in this sacred ecology. When you walk your swadharma, you do not merely act — you participate in the restoration of cosmic balance. And that, perhaps, is the secret of Kantara: the moment when your duty, your longing, and the will of the Divine become one sound — the sound that calls you home.
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