Who is Shiva? Many stories and legends surround this most prominent
figure of Indian spiritual traditions. Is he a god? Or a myth
constructed from Hindu culture’s collective imagination? Or is there a
deeper meaning to Shiva, revealed only to those who seek?
When we say “Shiva,” there are two fundamental aspects that we are referring to. The word “Shiva”
means literally, “that which is not.” Today, modern science is proving
to us that everything comes from nothing and goes back to nothing. The
basis of existence and the fundamental quality of the cosmos is vast
nothingness. The galaxies are just a small happening – a sprinkling. The
rest is all vast empty space, which is referred to as Shiva. That is
the womb from which everything is born, and that is the oblivion into
which everything is sucked back. Everything comes from Shiva and goes
back to Shiva.
So Shiva is described as a non-being, not as a being. Shiva is not described as light, but as darkness.
Humanity has gone about eulogizing light only because of the nature of
the visual apparatus that they carry. Otherwise, the only thing that is
always, is darkness. Light is a limited happening in the sense that any
source of light – whether a light bulb or the sun – will eventually lose
its ability to give out light. Light is not eternal. It is always a
limited possibility because it happens and it ends. Darkness is a much
bigger possibility than light. Nothing needs to burn, it is always – it
is eternal. Darkness is everywhere. It is the only thing that is all
pervading.

But if I say “divine darkness,” people think I am a devil worshiper or
something. In fact, in some places in the West it is being propagated
that Shiva is a demon! But if you look at it as a concept, there isn’t a
more intelligent concept on the planet about the whole process of
creation and how it has happened. I have been talking about this in
scientific terms without using the word “Shiva” to scientists around the
world, and they are amazed, “Is this so? This was known? When?” We have
known this for thousands of years. Almost every peasant in India knows
about it unconsciously. He talks about it without even knowing the
science behind it.
The First Yogi
On another level, when we say “Shiva,” we are referring to a certain yogi, the Adiyogi or the first yogi,
and also the Adi Guru, the first Guru, who is the basis of what we know
as the yogic science today. Yoga does not mean standing on your head or
holding your breath. Yoga
is the science and technology to know the essential nature of how this
life is created and how it can be taken to its ultimate possibility.
This first transmission of yogic sciences
happened on the banks of Kanti Sarovar, a glacial lake a few miles
beyond Kedarnath in the Himalayas, where Adiyogi began a systematic
exposition of this inner technology to his first seven disciples,
celebrated today as the Sapta Rishis. This predates all religion. Before
people devised divisive ways of fracturing humanity to a point where it
seems almost impossible to fix, the most powerful tools necessary to
raise human consciousness were realized and propagated.
One and the Same
So “Shiva” refers to both “that which is
not,” and Adiyogi, because in many ways, they are synonymous. This
being, who is a yogi, and that non-being, which is the basis of the
existence, are the same, because to call someone a yogi means he has
experienced the existence as himself. If you have to contain the
existence within you even for a moment as an experience, you have to be
that nothingness. Only nothingness can hold everything. Something can
never hold everything. A vessel cannot hold an ocean. This planet can
hold an ocean, but it cannot hold the solar system. The solar system can
hold these few planets and the sun, but it cannot hold the rest of the
galaxy. If you go progressively like this, ultimately you will see it is
only nothingness that can hold everything. The word “yoga” means
“union.” A yogi is one who has experienced the union. That means, at
least for one moment, he has been absolute nothingness.
When we talk about Shiva as “that which is
not,” and Shiva as a yogi, in a way they are synonymous, yet they are
two different aspects. Because India is a dialectical culture, we shift
from this to that and that to this effortlessly. One moment we talk
about Shiva as the ultimate, the next moment we talk about Shiva as the
man who gave us this whole process of yoga.
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