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Home Editorial & Opinion

Ganpati Bappa: The Arrival That Awakens, The Departure That Reminds…

Nitin Sharma by Nitin Sharma
August 29, 2025
in Editorial & Opinion
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Ganpati Bappa: The Arrival That Awakens, The Departure That Reminds…
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Every year, Ganpati Bappa arrives not just in clay, but in   consciousness. He doesn’t walk through our doors; he walks into our distractions. He doesn’t just sit on a pedestal; he settles into our chaos.

 

His arrival is a reset.

A divine interruption.

A reminder that joy can be simple, that devotion can be loud, and that wisdom can wear a crown of modaks.

 

Children giggle as they decorate his throne.

Mothers hum ancient shlokas.

Fathers fold their palms with a reverence that feels older than memory.

 

For ten days, we remember what it means to be human.

 

  • Visarjan: The Goodbye That Isn’t

 

And then, just as gently as he came, he leaves.

The streets are louder, but our hearts are quieter.

We chant “Ganpati Bappa Morya!”

But what we really mean is: Don’t let me forget.

 

Because his departure is not an ending.

It’s a mirror.

A moment that asks: What did you learn while I was here?

Did you breathe deeper?

Did you speak kinder?

Did you remember that obstacles are not curses—they’re invitations to grow?

 

 

  • Arrival and Departure: The Sacred Cycle

 

Ganpati’s homecoming and visarjan are not opposites.

They are two halves of the same breath.

 

He comes to remind us of our divine potential.

He leaves to awaken our responsibility to live it.

 

He enters our homes.

He exits through our hearts.

And in that cycle, we are meant to transform—not just decorate.

 

 

  • The World We’ve Built—and What We’re Losing

 

But outside this sacred cycle, the world spins faster than ever.

Words like depression, materialism, and impatience are no longer rare—they’re routine.

 

We live in a time where people compete not for wisdom, but for likes.

Not for depth, but for views.

Not for truth, but for trending.

 

In this digital age, even our thoughts are outsourced.

AI prompts flood our screens.

Algorithms decide what we feel, what we buy, what we believe.

 

And slowly, silently, the human mind is losing its thinking power.

We’re becoming reactive, not reflective.

Stimulated, but not centered.

Connected, but not conscious.

 

  • The Breath We Forgot

 

The antidote isn’t more data.

It’s more depth.

And that begins with the art of breathing.

 

We weren’t born to breathe shallow.

We were born to breathe like the ocean—deep, rhythmic, alive.

 

Sudarshan Kriya is not just a technique. It’s a return to source.

It re-ignites the brain’s true power—not through stimulation, but through stillness.

It restores balance—not through control, but through clarity.

Because before we can think clearly, we must breathe consciously.

 

  • Children: The Quiet Mirrors of Divinity

 

In every child’s soul is a reflection of God.

Their innocence is not ignorance, it’s insight.

Their curiosity is not chaos, it’s clarity.

 

If we teach them Sudarshan Kriya—not as a ritual,                              but as a rhythm—they will grow up not just smart, but centered.

Let breathing become their morning chore.

Let meditation become their emotional hygiene.

Let silence become their strength.

 

Because children who learn to breathe right will grow up to build a world that feels right.

 

 The World Is Listening. Are We?

 

We’ve seen Sri Sri Ravi Shankar speak at the United Nations on World Meditation Day.

We’ve seen thousands across continents sit in silence, seeking balance, realigning with purpose.

The world is not waiting for another app.

It’s waiting for awareness.

 

India must lead…not just in festivals, but in inner freedom.

Not just in rituals, but in realization.

Let our homes become havens.

Let our schools become sanctuaries.

Let our children become torchbearers of breath and balance.

 

  • So When He Returns Next Year…

 

Let Ganpati Bappa find more than marigolds and modaks.

Let him find children who breathe with awareness.

Let him find families who meditate together.

Let him find a nation that doesn’t just chant his name, but embodies his wisdom.

 

Let him see that we didn’t just welcome him, we walked with him.

That we didn’t just immerse his idol; we awakened his ideals.

 

Because the real visarjan isn’t in the river.

It’s in the release of ignorance.

And the real arrival isn’t in the clay.

It’s in the breath that remembers who we are.

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