By remembering Kalabhairava, a person attains the bliss that is in the deepest state of Samadhi, where you are devoid of all worries - not bothered by nothing. There is a difference between learning and excellence and this state of bliss gives a person all the coveted excellence. He is the granter of all kinds of coveted excellence in life, all the knowledge that we desire. Lord Kalabhairava is described as bhoot sangha nayaka - the lord of the pancha bhootas - which are earth, fire, water, air, and ether.
Chanting this ashtakam frees us from shoka (grief), moha (attachment and delusion, the causes of misery), dainya (poverty or the feeling of lack), lobha (greed), kopa (irritability and anger), and tapa (sufferings). We are provided with merits that are unknown, incomprehensible, and intangible. Just remembering the state of Kalabhairava, by chanting the Kalabhairava Ashtakam every day gives us knowledge of life and leads us to liberation. Benefits of Chanting Kalabhairava Ashtakam Adi Shankaracharya says that even the lords, those divine energies, bow down at the feet of Kalabhairava, yearning for that state of bliss and samadhi. This is also coveted by all the devatas (divine energies). In the Kalabhairava Ashtakam, where Adi Shankaracharya praised Lord Kalabhairava as the Lord of Kashi, he actually means the Agya Chakra – signifying total awareness of the present moment. This leads us to the deepest state of samadhi (meditation) which is also called a state of bhairava. And when this realization of time and the present moment comes, our Agya Chakra (the seat of knowledge in our body) gets heightened, signifying the presence of Lord Kalabhairava in us. The kings and empires that were here thousands of years ago, the wonders that are present now, and anything that will come in the future - they will all perish as time passes.Īnd where is time? It is not in the past or the future. Anything that is present in this world will dissolve and perish with time. It signifies that time eats away everything. The depiction of Kalabhairava is vikraala (large and fearsome). In tantra, Kashi is recognized as Agya Chakra, which is located between the eyebrows. Also, Lord Kalabhairava is the lord of the city of Kashi. So, Kalabhairava is someone who is neither yesterday nor tomorrow. The spiritual symbolism behind Kalabhairava So shvaana means something which is neither yesterday nor tomorrow, something which is only in the now, the present moment. In Vedic literature, the meaning of shva is tomorrow as well as yesterday, and the meaning of na is not. Shvaana is formed from two words shva and na. In spirituality, the words ‘death’ and ‘time’ are symbolic. It is the most fearsome depiction of Lord Shiva. The vehicle of Kalabhairava is shvaana (a dog). Before finding out what it is, let us first read the lyrics of Kalabhairava Ashtakam. The depiction of this form may seem at odds with the dispassionate, calm, and meditative form that many pray to every day, but there is a deep symbolism associated with Kalabhairava. This form of Shiva, described by Adi Shankaracharya in the Kalabhairava Ashtakam, is shown to be naked, black, entwined with a garland of skulls, three eyes, weapons of destruction in his four hands, and entwined with snakes. But, one of the most fearsome avatars of Lord Shiva is the Kalabhairava. Although his original ascetic form is widely revered, his Pashupatinath and Vishwanath avatar are also quite famous. Lord Shiva has several forms and avatars (manifestation of a deity in physical body form).