Starting the CREATION
Hinduism, is one of the oldest religion of the world with numerous Gods and Goddesses. Other civilisations also had traces of this religion. A golden trio of Gods exsist in Hinduism commonlu known as The Trinity or Trideva. This trioo consists of three famous entites ,, Bramha , Vishnu , Shiva. Its a complete new kind of work in this application stretching out of Romance and Adventures to Mythology. There will be three Editions of this Book on Bramha Vishnu and Shiva. In this book we will talking about the Creator who created the universe(According to Hinduism).
So let us experience a change and take a look at the diversities of mythologies all over the world. Wishing all a Happy Reading.
Priyankar Bhattacharjee
_______________________________________
Episode 1 : The Creation
The air in the cosmic void wasn’t cold; it was nothing. There was no light to cast a shadow and no wind to carry a sound. Before the clocks began to tick, there was only the Kshira Sagara—the Ocean of Milk—stretching into infinity.
The Stirring of the Lotus
Resting upon the coils of the great serpent Ananta Shesha, Lord Vishnu lay in a state of Yoga Nidra (divine slumber). He wasn't asleep in the way we understand it; he was the consciousness of the entire universe held in a single breath.
As the cycle of time (the Kalpa) demanded a new beginning, a single golden seed of desire stirred within the Divine. From Vishnu’s navel, a stalk began to grow, cutting through the darkness. At its tip, a lotus bud bloomed, radiating a light that the void had never seen.
The Awakening of Brahma
Inside that lotus sat Brahma. He opened his eyes and saw... nothing.
Brahma was confused. He looked in all four directions, and as he did, three more heads sprouted from his neck so he could see everything at once. He looked up, down, and around, but the silence was absolute.
"Who am I?" he whispered. "What is my purpose?"
He climbed down the lotus stalk, trying to find its root, traveling for a thousand years, but the stem seemed to go on forever. Realizing he couldn't find the answer through movement, he climbed back into his flower, closed his four sets of eyes, and meditated.
The Sound of Creation
After ages of stillness, a sound vibrated through his very being: "Tapa." (Penance).
Brahma understood. He didn't need to go anywhere; he needed to create from within. He began to chant. From his mind, the first elements of the universe started to leak out like ink into water:
The Mind-Born Sons: He first created the Kumaras, but they refused to procreate, choosing a life of spirit instead.
The Great Sages: He then manifested the Saptarishi (the seven sages) to help hold the wisdom of the Vedas.
The Duality: Finally, he divided himself to create Man and Woman (Shatarupa and Manu), allowing the physical world to populate.
The Fabric of Reality
Brahma didn't just build the world out of bricks; he built it out of Dharma (duty) and Maya (illusion). He crafted the mountains to be the bones of the earth, the grass to be its hair, and the rivers to be its veins.
But creation was chaotic. It needed order. To balance Brahma’s raw power of expansion, the universe required Saraswati, the goddess of knowledge and the arts. She gave the world language, music, and the logic of mathematics. Without her, Brahma’s creation was just a pile of matter; with her, it became a symphony.