The lotus is a special flower.
It is sacred to Buddhist and Hindus alike, used in the rites and rituals of both religions. The national flower of India, even Indians living abroad hold a place in their heart for this flower.
The lotus flower emerges from the depths of the mud and muck at the bottom of a pond or swamp. It slowly grows towards the water’s surface, continually moving towards the light. Once it comes to the surface of the water, the lotus begins to blossom and turns into a beautiful flower. Growing from the mud at the bottom of ponds and streams, the exquisite lotus flower rises above the water.
The rise of this exquisite form from the mud depicts our rise from the depths into spiritual enlightenment. The Hindu Gods Vishnu, Brahma, and the goddesses Lakshmi and Sarasvati are all commonly depicted as seated or standing on a lotus flower. A wide range of Hindu scriptures speak of the importance of the lotus and its relationship to the gods.
The lotus is usually white or pink, but can be blue, with 15 or more oval, spreading petals, and a peculiar, flat seed case at its centre.
It plays a fundamental part in our energy system, as the chakras are depicted as various-petalled lotus flowers.
In Buddhism, the lotus represents purity of body, speech, and mind, floating above the muddy waters of attachment and desire. Buddah is often depicted sitting on a giant lotus leaf or blossom. According to legend, he was born with the ability to walk and everywhere he stepped, lotus flowers bloomed.
It was believed to be the seat of god in early Egypt. One legend has it that before the universe came into being, there was an infinite ocean of inert water which constituted the primeval being named Nun. Out of Nun emerged a lotus flower, together with a single mound of dry land. The lotus blossoms opened, and out stepped the self-created sun god, Atum, as a child.
A slightly different version of the creation story describes the sun god who formed himself from the chaos of Nun emerged from the lotus petals as Ra. The lotus is a flower which opens and closes each day. The petals of the lotus blossom enfolded Ra when he returned to it each night.
The ancient Egyptians also developed the art of counting to a high degree, but their system was quite different. For example, the number 1,000 was symbolised by a picture of a lotus flower, and the number 2,000 was symbolised by a picture of two lotus flowers growing out of a bush.
Did you know that lotus flowers self regulate their heat? Drs. Roger Seymour and Paul Schultze-Motel, physiologists at the University of Adelaide (i.e. here), found that the lotus flowers blooming in the Adelaide Botanic Gardens maintained a temperature of 86 to 95 degrees Fahrenheit, even when the air temperature dropped to 50 degrees. They suspect the flowers may be turning up the heat for the benefit of their cold-blooded insect pollinators. The study was published in the journal Nature. (see here and here for photographs of the lotus pond in the Botanic Gardens in Adelaide, in its decay cycle. I will post more pictures of it when it is in flower again.)
In Cambodia we witnessed the folding of the lotus flower, and learned to fold lotus blossoms ourselves in an impromptu class in the middle of a market, helped by an unknown lady who gave us all her lotus blossoms and then disappeared. Folding the petals beautifully reveals the heart of the lotus flower, full of pure exquisiteness.
Hindu scriptures say that the Atman dwells in the lotus within the heart. Here is a meditation for this week.
Visualise within yourself a lotus, centred right within the centre of your chest, right within your heart. Try to mentally feel and see the heart as a lotus flower right within you. Within the centre of the lotus, try to see a small light.
Hindu scriptures state that the Atman within the heart looks like a brilliant light about the size of your thumb–just a small light. This light is an emanation of your effulgent being. It is dwelling right within. The Self God is deeper than that. The lotus is within the heart, and the Self God dwells deep within that lotus of light. (Hinduism Today)
Sources
People are saying:
- Folo says in A flowah meets her relatives that this post cheered her day.
Ahhhhhhh. My dear pal meta, proprietor of the exquisite :pastry studio, saw me having a bad-petal day and sent me this, all the way from Australia, to chill on.
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