The
Ganesha God's Eye View
by Tara Khandro
While working with National Public Television in the United States I
had the opportunity to meet the author Thomas Wolfe. Thomas Wolfe was
known for wearing pristine white suites which matched his full head
of white hair. The only memory I have of our dialog together was his
answer to my question: “Why white suites?” His answer: “Every
time I experience writer's block I buy a white suite.” As a young
play write and documentary film maker I had yet to experience writer's
block. It was so out of the realm of my experience I didn't even ask
Mr. Wolfe the meaning of 'writer's block.' I simply surmised that he
must experience it a lot considering he only wears white suites.
A few years later in the midst of writing my first book I experienced
writer's block. Some days I would show up at my desk ready to go and
nothing flowed. No matter what I did to move energy, I felt like a 'blockhead'.
I remembered Mr. Wolfe in his white suites and wondered what kind of
a costume would serve to remove my obstacles. It was at that point a
wooden statue of the Hindu deity Ganesha came into my life. Ganesha
was my white suite.
We met at a shop filled with sacred statues from around the world. I
immediately fell in love with this elephant headed male baring an abundant
belly and a twinkle in his eye. His red body, adorned with gold and
green accents, was alive. I could hear the tablas was playing calling
me. This Ganesha was inviting me to dance with the divine. The owner
of the shop said that Ganesha is the deity Hindus call upon to remove
barriers. She also told me that this ancient Indian statue had been
sitting in her store for years, waiting for the right person. I issued
this jolly Ganesha an invitation into my home. Ganesha agreed and we
have been friends for the past fourteen years.
Ganesha is my right hand man as I write. His energy of celebration removes
the obstacle of seriousness for me. Seriousness tends to freeze the
brain waves. He is my Shiva to my Shakti. Ganesha is invoked at the
commencement of many Balinese ceremonies to ensure success and is positioned
at the entrance of Balinese compounds. Ganesha is the deity for writers
and activates wit, wisdom and knowledge. Many paintings, batiks and
statues show Ganesha with a pen and a book. Ganesha is recognized as
the deity who facilitated the writing of the Hindu epic scripture, the
Mahabharata from which the many stories composing Balinese dances and
shadow plays are derived.

The author of the Mahabharata, poet and sage, Vyasa invoked the great
Ganesha to be his scribe. Ganesha gleefully accepted. He felt the writing
of such a significant work to be such an honor that no ordinary pen
would do. Ganesha broke off one of his tusks and made a pen out of it.
This tusk became the conduit through which the divine teachings of the
Mahabharata were transmitted.
After Ganesha broke off his tusk he playfully posed a condition upon
Vyasa: That he dictate to him continuously without pause. Vyasa agreed
to this challenge offering his own condition: That Ganesha understands
every word and concept before writing it down. Thus was set up an intricate
rhythm of generating and assimilating divine wisdom. When Ganesha completed
writing a verse, Vyasa would dictate a profound stanza. This required
Ganesha to rest, reflect and integrate the meaning of the words, giving
Vyasa time for another wave of words to arrive. The writing of the greatest
scripture in the Hindu tradition becomes an example of a right relationship
between the messenger and scribe.
You don't have to be a writer to be an author. Each of us is the author
of our life. We re-ceive a message from within which formulates a desire
compelling a choice of action thus writing our life. We all experience
times as a blockhead. The vehicle for Ganesha is a rat or mouse. This
rodent is depicted underneath Ganesha's left foot. At first glance the
juxtaposition of this huge elephant man riding this tiny animal evokes
absurd laughter. What I have come to know as the meaning of Mr. Rat
is that wisdom is derived from accepting and understanding those gnawing
creatures within us-craving, aversion, attachment-that seek to separate
us from living into our innate knowledge. A rat is destructive to the
rice fields, to that which provides sustaining nourishment. Our inner
rats can overtake the field from which Source shines within creating
a rat delusion-we begin to think that we are the rat instead of the
infinitely expansive Ganesha.

One day, as I was deeply absorbed in the experience of understanding
one of my inner obstacles, discontent, I took myself for a long walk
in the rice fields. Nearing the end of my meditative contemplation a
mouse appeared on the path. Instead of fleeing from my big, bare feet
he simply stood and looked at me. I looked at him. And as I looked at
him I suddenly felt myself as the huge, rotund Ganesha looking down
upon this tiny mouse beneath my feet. My entire Being expanded into
Light. I began to witness this moment from the Ganesha God's Eye View.
What I saw: This discontent that is chewing away at me is so small and
I am making it so big! I am judging it, maligning it and letting it
manipulate me until my mind is so clouded that all I see before me is
a wretched etching of a lifeless life. My discontent is this little
mouse. In that moment of revelation, I slowly raised my big toe which
was in front of the mouse's nose. The mouse reacted and leaped into
the ravine along with my discontent.
All of our obstacles arise from within or without as invitations to
rest, reflect, digest and understand. Too often when we experience a
damn in the flow of life we react as the rat to my big toe: in a flight
or flight response. This reaction arises from an experience in our past
that has locked itself inside of our autonomic nervous system. In this
fearful reaction our heart shuts down and our mind becomes a black magic
pot stewing with anger, blame and shame. Ganesha's huge belly symbolically
shows us that we contain the whole universe and that when we root into
this Source we have the ability to fearlessly digest whatever experiences
that life brings us.
Ganesha guides us into a balance between the spiritual and the mundane.
He bestows bountiful boons for an affluent life. Every tiny creature
has a purpose in this great divine play. Like the tiny mouse who can
scurry into small nooks and crannies Ganesha can seek out that within
our own mind has become a barrier. If we perceive and believe something
to be an obstacle, so it is. If we see what is before us as a guru guiding
us toward discovering alternative solutions and revealing what is hidden
from view then we have the potential to cease being a block head. We
then become the Ganesha God's Eye View.
Below is a simple Ganesha chant:
Om Ghung Ganapataye Namaha!
Om = Activates the divine principle
Ghung = The identifying seed syllable, or bija mantra for Ganesh
Ganapataye = Another name for Ganesh
Namaha = Brining the vibration of Ganesh into your heart as your own
Pronounciation:
Om = A U M
Guhng = As it sounds
Ganapataye = gah-nah-paht-ah-yeh
Namaha - nah-mah-hah