Re: New Moon -amāvāsya
hariḥ oṁ
~~~~~

Originally Posted by
ConnieD
Soma is an actual person, a deity? One person, named Soma?
Namasté and hello ConnieD
I wrote
What do we call the moon? Soma ( also Chandr¹
. When Śiva and Pārvatī are joined together we get Soma. Hence for amāvāsya, the new moon Śiva and Pārvatī come together, are enveloped, become Soma.
Soma has multiple meanings... it is a name for the moon. Yet this soma सोम is also defined as the juice of the soma plant. The juice is extracted by the leaves being pressed between stones by the priests , then sprinkled with water , and purified in a strainer.
Now that said, there are over 1200 verses we find in the veda on this soma let alone the entire 9th maṇḍala related to this soma. Sure seems lots of attention in the Veda on a plant and its juice, don't you think?
The wise say the following:
Laymen and/or the ritualists may regard soma as a creeper (the plant itself) to be crushed for getting its juice for use in the ritual. But to the wise (kavi or ṛṣi-s , these seer-s, are also called kavi) soma is not something to be drunk.
Well this soma is also called vanaspati¹ - and this helps us get to its real meaning. Vana¹ means abundance, a ray of light; vanas means loveliness. From these this abundance, loveliness, rays of light conjures the notion of delight. This soma is vanaspati, the lord (pati) of delight. But delight of what? The deight of existence.
The notion is the following. There is 'delight' in every aspect of existence... we miss most of it as we have our attention in other places. But we still are able to experience some joy , some delight from actions. That could be from giving, receiving, doing, helping, etc. There is this feeling we get some delight... it is there then it fades, but we experience it.
As I comprehend it, every action exerts some pressure on existence that surrounds us. This is the squeezing between the stones that was mentioned above ' pressed between the stones'. This squeezing (suta) releases this delight (soma) - we feel delighted, and as the rig veda tells us, the devatā ( the creative impulses , the devā-s) rejoice in enjoying this soma too, they 'drink' it.
That is why the wise say, its other then a plant.
praṇām
words
- vana वन - also means a forest , wood , grove , thicket , quantity of lotuses or other plants growing in a thick cluster ; a fountain , spring; earnest desire; plenty , abundance
- vanas वनस् - loveliness; also longing, desire.
- vanaspati वनस्पति - 'lord of plants'; an ascetic; also another name of viṣṇu
Last edited by yajvan; 14 January 2009 at 10:48 AM.
Reason: spelling
यतस्त्वं शिवसमोऽसि
yatastvaṁ śivasamo'si
because you are identical with śiva
_
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