Loving Gaṇeśa: Hinduism’s Endearing Elephant-Faced God

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Gaṇeśa Puzzles§

Gaṇeśa Prahelikāḥ§

गनेशप्रहेलिकाः§

ImageHE PLAYFUL, POWERFUL CHILD OF UMĀ IS BĀLA GAṆEŚA, ONE OF LORD Gaṇeśa’s favorite forms. Here we venture a few forays into the world of high-minded fun and wordful frolic. Enjoy. This is playful svadhyāya. Svadhyāya is a key concept in Hinduism, one of the classical yamas, or cardinal guidelines of conduct, expounded by the ancient Nātha Ṛishi Patañjali and others. It is the deliberate focused activity of self-upliftment through scriptural study, memorization of holy verses, reading elevating tales of spiritual giants and listening to religious discourses. We use our time involving the mind and intellect in pursuits that lead us onward toward the goal of moksha, rather than dispersing consciousness through pointless ramification. But it need not be all so serious. For children and youthful minds, play can also be svadhyāya—recreation that fills the mind with religious impressions. Hindu art and culture overflows with an unsurpassed richness of spiritual play. This chapter is a small contribution to that vast river of dharma’s fun and games.§

Lord Gaṇeśa rules the mūlādhāra, the chakra of memory. Yogic insight shows that memorization of spiritual teachings, chants and concepts, a seemingly mere rote process, in fact works a transformation of the energies of the mūlādhāra. We actively remold the contents of the subconscious, refining the nature, sublimating and transmuting instinctive energies. May these few games invoke and indelibly stamp upon our minds the great teachings and culture of dharma held in the mind of our beloved Lord Gaṇeśa. Seers say even heavenly devas delight in word play of a spiritual nature.§

The Puzzle of the Guardian of Bhārat§

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1. Sacred syllables chanted by Hindus.§

4. The chakra that Gaṇeśa sits upon is a four-petalled ______ .§

7. Gaṇeśa’s vāhana (vehicle)§

8. Gaṇeśa is full of _____.§

11. ______ fields are sacred to Lord Gaṇeśa.§

13. Gaṇeśa is sometimes called the Lord of _______.§

14. Gaṇeśa is very ____.§

15. Gaṇeśa has four _____.§

16. Gaṇeśa uses a _____ and a goad to help him do his work.§

18. Divine servant. Used at the end of a devotee’s name.§

19. What you say to Gaṇeśa when he answers your prayer.§

21. A Śiva temple facing ___ is a fire-temple (abbreviation).§

22. The God we always worship first.§

25. Hindus pray to Gaṇeśa to ___ them in good and happy ways.§

26. Gaṇeśa loves all the animals in all the _____ in the world.§

29. Gaṇeśa works slowly and patiently, never in _____.§

30. The Gaṅgā is a sacred _____ to all Hindus.§

31. Twice.§

33. Hindus worship Gaṇeśa with ___ and yellow flowers.§

35. Another name for Vishṇu.§

37. Gaṇeśa is even brighter than the ____.§

39. Gaṇeśa’s favorite sweet.§

40. _____ gather honey from flowers.§

41. Gaṇeśa always makes careful decisions, never a ____ decision.§

43. Kailāsa is in the Himālayan _________.§

46. The lower instinctive mind, seat of desire and governor of sensory and motor organs.§

47. Gaṇeśa pujās start as early as 3:00 __ in the morning.§

48. Gaṇeśa is Lord Śiva’s eldest ____.§

49. Indian variety of basil often used for japa beads.§

51. Having two.§

52. First two letters of the number of most famous Gaṇeśa temples in Maharashtra.§

53. Kolam designs are ______ on the floor in front of Gaṇeśa shrines.§

54. Gaṇeśa pujās fill you with ____.§

55. Gaṇeśa’s ______ flows through our minds and all form.§

57. Indian women wear _______.§

58. Incense has a beautiful ______.§

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1. The fruit Gaṇeśa won in a contest with his brother.§

2. Gaṇeśa ___ too many modaka balls one day.§

3. Gifts to the poor and crippled.§

5. Devotees who are having a special Gaṇeśa archana often carry their offerings on a ______.§

6. Gaṇeśa _____ the Mahābhārata with one of his tusks.§

7. The monsoons of Southeast Asia bring severe tropical _____.§

9. The traditional Hindu wedding is called a _________ ceremony.§

10. Just looking at the mūrti of Gaṇeśa makes you feel _______.§

11. First and last letters of bean pod that tastes like chocolate.§

12. Cane fields are _______.§

15. Gaṇeśa is known __ the Lord of Obstacles.§

17. The big chakra that Gaṇeśa sits upon deep in the microcosm.§

19. Lord Gaṇeśa lives in the _____ World.§

20. Gaṇeśa _______ forgets the prayers of His close devotees.§

21. Hindu holy scriptures in Sanskrit.§

22. The weapon Gaṇeśa uses to knock obstacles out of our path and spur us onward.§

23. A big word for “help.”§

24. Gaṇeśa has the head of an _______.§

27. An expression of surprise.§

28. Gaṇeśa always knows how to answer our prayers just right because His ________ is so vast.§

31. Gaṇeśa’s memory is so great He _________ things that happened millions of years ago.§

34. Indian thin flour pancake.§

36. The subtle inner ethers.§

38. When Murugan tried to win the contest with His brother, He flew around the world _______.§

40. Gaṇeśa’s _____ is bigger than any computer in the world.§

42. The nāgaswara and conch are two types of temple _____.§

43. Lord Gaṇeśa is a ____ deva.§

44. The first two letters of the first digit on your foot.§

45. Gaṇeśa likes a lot of ______ in His sweet goodies.§

50. Even though Gaṇeśa has little eyes, He still ____ everything.§

53. Many different organic substances are used to ___ the beautifully colored Indian fabrics.§

56. The first initial of Śiva’s two sons.§

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The Puzzle of the Lord of Massive Girth§

[Mahā Clue for this whole puzzle: All words are Sanskrit.]§

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1. Lord Gaṇeśa’s seed mantra.§

5. Good karma, righteous action,
merit.
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8. Eternal, something which should
be done without fail always
at the right time.
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10. The second goal of human
existence, wealth.
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11. The first goal of human existence, love, pleasure.§

16. “Demon place.” Hindu concept of hell; lower realm of the Second World in which souls temporarily experience self-created hellish states of mind.§

18. What you are when you always follow dharma. A person good enough to go to the temple and do pūjā.§

20. Our most important scriptures.§

22. The inert, dark, heavy, dull, ignorant quality of nature.§

24. A hall, generally in a temple or monastery.§

25. Same as moksha.§

Down§

2. The third-eye chakra.§

3. Spiritual practice of devotedly repeating a mantra, generally a specified number of daily repetitions while counting on a mālā.§

4. A name of Supreme God as “The Auspicious One.”§

5. Bad karma, sin, wrong-doing.§

6. A pot of water on which a husked coconut is nested on five mango leaves.§

7. The soul.§

9. Lord Gaṇeśa’s vāhana, the mouse, traditionally associated with abundance.§

12. Delusion, fascination with and attachment to material existence.§

13. Individual or group singing of devotional songs, hymns.§

14. Rosary for performing japa, recitation of holy names.§

15. A round sweet goody made of rice, coconut, sugar, etc. Esoterically, it corresponds to siddhi (attainment or fulfillment) the gladdening fulfillment of pure joy.§

17. The Deity of fire.§

19. The Primal Sound.§

21. The name of the light that is waved during pūjā.§

22. That, pure Being.§

23. Immanent Truth.§

The Puzzle of the Fruit of Truth§

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3. Same as moksha.§

4. Merging the individual mind with the universal mind of God within.§

5. Peace.§

8. A Mahādeva, or great God, created by Lord Śiva to assist souls in their evolution. The elephant-faced Patron of Art and Science, first son of Śiva, Remover of Obstacles.§

10. Teacher, guide, remover of darkness.§

13. Loving Gaṇeśa holds a sprig of this wish-fulfilling tree to tell us that all our wishes will be gratified. We have but to tell Him our needs, that is all, just tell Him.§

17. Loving Gaṇeśa has this snake as His pet. Many are afraid of such creatures, but He tells us that it is the kuṇḍalinī within all and each one can rise above all adversity.§

20. Symbolic hand gestures used in pūjā, dance and haṭha yoga.§

21. Dedicated striving and practice.§

23. A stringed instrument with two round dried gourds on the ends, that makes heavenly music.§

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1. A period of time that spans many ages.§

2. Loving Gaṇeśa uses this instrument to prod the lazy ahead in their birth karmas whenever they tarry.§

6. “Without qualities.” Refers to the Absolute God, Paraśiva or Parabrahman.§

7. “Accomplished or skillful one.” Someone who is dedicated to
spiritual practices is usually celibate, wears white and is not a sannyāsin.
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9. Loving Gaṇeśa knows there are difficult times ahead for some of His devotees. He protects them with this implement in gentle ways from evils they have attracted.§

11. Householder; family man or woman. The period of human life after brahmacharya, or studentship, is over, the individual establishing of a career, home and family.§

12. The calm, quiescent, peaceful, still quality of nature.§

14. A word meaning “of the stars.” Anything in the subtle non-physical dimension of the Second World.§

15. Primal life force of the breath.§

16. “Great Deva” or “Great Shining One.” A name of Śiva.§

18. The symbol and mantra denoting God and the Primal Sound.§

19. Loving Gaṇeśa uses this implement to cast karmas back on devotees for resolution, never letting up until completion.§

20. Loving Gaṇeśa tells of this fruit: “It was given to Me from Lord Śiva’s own hand after performing My first wisdom act. It represents the highest spiritual fruition.”§

22. It’s hot in summertime, so Loving Gaṇeśa sits whisking away the past within the minds of devotees with this cooling device.§

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The Puzzle of the Lord of Spiritual Mysteries§

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4. Faith.§

5. Loving Gaṇeśa, like His brother Murugan, holds this great power. It flashes in the sky during storms, spirit over mind, mind over matter.§

6. “A “not spiritual” being living in the Second World on the lower astral plane, sometimes called a “demon.”§

8. The animal that each Hindu God is depicted as riding on, symbolic of a function of the God.§

11. “God.” Can refer to the image or mūrti installed in a temple or to the Mahādeva whom the murthi represents.§

12. A troop of devas, especially used in reference to Lord Śiva’s attendants under Lord Gaṇeśa’s supervision.§

17. The last portion of the Vedas. They teach philosophy through people asking questions and wise ṛishis’ giving answers.§

19. Loving Gaṇeśa broke this, His beautiful right tusk in a sacrificial act, using it as a stylus to get the job done. By this act He demonstrates that what we begin we must finish.§

22. Inner plane being of light.§

23. The ancient Hindu symbol of auspiciousness and good fortune. A square cross with broken arms.§

25. The fiery, restless quality of nature.§

26. A sweet nut from a palm tree hard as a rock, but soft and white inside.§

27. What He shoots from his bow.§

Down§

1. Small circle of red powder (kuṅkuma) placed between and just above the eyebrows. It symbolizes the opening of the third eye, seeing with superconscious soul vision.§

2. Loving Gaṇeśa edits all these scriptures on this and other planets.§

3. Sacred art of “drawing” intricate decorative patterns at the entrance to a home or temple or at ceremonial sites with the rice powder or colored powdered pulses.§

7. Hinduism’s revealed scriptures.§

9. Loving Gaṇeśa uses this rope-like device to draw close those He
loves and save strayed ones in
extraordinary ways.
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10. Spiritual attainment or power, superconscious abilities, fulfillment.§

13. Triple-pointed lance representing Śiva’s three-in-one power: Love, Wisdom and Action.§

14. Loving Gaṇeśa sits at Lord Śiva’s holy feet with japa mālā made of these seeds.§

15. The chakra located at the base of the spine and governing memory, time and space where Loving Gaṇeśa sits inside each person.§

16. Sanskrit word meaning “deed or act;” the principle of cause and effect. Also, the totality of our actions and their concomitant reactions in this and all previous lives.§

18. Divine law; the law of being; the way of righteousness or “that which holds one’s true nature.”§

20. Loving Gaṇeśa makes us grow healthy food by the desire for this simple underground vegetable.§

21. Loving Gaṇeśa wants us to be like this flower that “comes from the depths of the mud opening into the bud high above the water’s edge.’’§

24. The nectar of immortality that
Loving Gaṇeśa keeps in his pot.
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The Lord Who Is Hidden in All Things§

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Solution for the Guardian of Bharat§

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Solution for the Puzzle of Dharma§

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Solution for the Fruit of Truth§

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Solution for the Lord of Mysteries§

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