The Temples of Tamil Nadu: Where Stone and Spirit Meet
And then there were the temples. The smooth, ancient stone beneath my bare feet in Meenakshi Temple. The soft white carpet at the Matrimandir. The horns and chanting in Thanjavur’s Big Temple. The near-sacred silence at the Matrimandir.
By sheer chance, we witnessed the vibrant musical procession of Lord Shiva being put to rest for the night in Thanjavur.
In Rameshwaram, Danna drew a group of women pilgrims. They chanted and danced around her as if she were a goddess. And honestly? They weren’t wrong.
At the Matrimandir, we entered the silence. The crystal ball at the center of the hall reflected the light from the sun. I saw particles of light within the ball, shifting from dim to bright gold, a mesmerizing dance of luminosity.
Temples are architectural marvels, but ultimately, they are only props—tools to amplify the search for something greater.
If my intention is to seek connection, I will find it anywhere. No doubt, temples help amplify the senses, creating a space for contemplation.
But truly, to be seen by a higher power is to meet oneself at the intersection with the transcendental, and that, for me, is possible only in those fleeting moments in my dance when I swirl and become a mere vessel of the infinite.
Robert Bly’s translation of Kabir’s poem captures the essence of spiritual ignorance and the irony of searching externally for what resides within. In his book Kabir: Ecstatic Poems, Bly translates:
I laugh when I hear that the fish in the water is thirsty.
You don’t grasp the fact that what is most alive of all
is inside your own house;
and so you walk from one holy city to the next with a
confused look!
Kabir will tell you the truth: go wherever you like, to
Calcutta or Tibet;
if you can’t find where your soul is hidden,
for you the world will never be real!