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Lord Shiva At the Indian Sculpture Park, Victoria’s Way, Roundwood, Co
Wicklow
From the crown of his hair flows the river of creation, the Goddess
Ganga (to wit, the Ganges). From his third eye he sends forth fire, the God
Agni, and who destroys the world. Shiva represents the maturing adult who is driven to
solve the quandary of life, namely how to live life to the full, how to
savour the reality of the most trivial moment while remaining fully attuned
to the cosmic and metaphysical dimensions which threaten to reduce the moment
to insignificance. As married
ascetic, Shiva lives out the extremes of life, now
chaste, now sensuous; now controlling, now releasing; now destructive, now
creative; now male, now female. In him, the sacred and the profane express to
perfection. His life exemplifies in the extreme the essential urge to being
and non-being, and to the deathless, hence the heart of all humans. Shiva’s life provides no
final and permanent solution, no synthesis, no balance, no rest, no peace. He
expresses the realization that the real world, Samsara, results from dynamic
interaction that creates order from chaos. Alone the frozen moment of action,
whatever its shape, is perfect, true, real. Alas, that moment cannot last. |