
The poet compares his soul to a lost calf in a vast forest, crying out “Mother! Mother!” without ceasing. With his entire being and breath, he calls out, and his only prayer to Kudalasangama Deva is a desperate, repeated plea for the gift of true life.
Spiritual Context
Core Spiritual Principle: When all spiritual techniques and intellectual efforts are exhausted, the final, most potent path is the raw, unstructured, and helpless cry of the soul for the Divine. This state of conscious dependence is the essence of surrender (Sharanagati) and the quickest means to attract divine grace.
Cosmic Reality Perspective: The Cosmic Reality is not only a transcendent principle (Linga) but also an immanent, nurturing presence (the Mother). The individual soul (Jiva) is eternally a part of this reality, and its feeling of separation is the “forest.” The cry is the soul’s innate magnetism drawing it back to its source.
Historical Reality (Anubhava Mantapa context): This vachana represents the pinnacle of the Anubhava Mantapa’s egalitarian ethos. It declares that spiritual realization is not for the learned or the powerful, but for anyone who can feel the genuine pangs of separation from the Divine and cry out with an authentic heart. It is the ultimate democratization of the path.
Interpretation
1. “Like a lost calf in the forest…”: The “calf” symbolizes the soul in its pure, innocent, and essential nature. The “forest” is the world of illusion (Maya), a place of confusion, danger, and alienation from its true home. The soul is not sinful, but simply lost.
2. “I cry ‘Mother! Mother!’ without rest.”: The repetition signifies a cry that is continuous and automatic, beyond the control of the ego. It is not a formal prayer but a spontaneous outpouring of the heart’s deepest need. “Mother” conveys intimacy, tenderness, and unconditional care.
3. “I call ‘Mother! Mother!’ with all my breath.”: This indicates totality. The seeker is not holding anything back. The entire life force (Prana) is being used as fuel for this one cry. There is no space for any other thought or desire.
4. “O Koodalasangamadeva, grant me life, grant me life.”: The final plea reveals that the current state is considered a form of death a life of separation from the Divine. The “life” begged for is spiritual life (Jivanmukti), the state of conscious union where the soul is reunited with its source and truly begins to live.
Practical Implications: The seeker is encouraged to stop relying solely on complex practices and to connect with this fundamental feeling of need. In moments of despair, confusion, or even in daily practice, one should inwardly cry out to the Divine with simple, childlike faith, laying bare one’s helplessness.
The Cosmic Reality
Anga (Human Dimension): The human as the “lost calf” vulnerable, helpless, and aware of its own limitation and separation. This awareness itself is the beginning of wisdom.
Linga (Divine Principle): Kudalasangama Deva as the responsive, compassionate “Mother,” the source of all life and comfort, who hears the cry of the separated soul and answers with the gift of Its own presence.
Jangama (Dynamic Interaction): The Jangama is the cry itself. It is not a static practice but a dynamic, living current of love and longing that flows from the Anga to the Linga. This current of desperate love is what ultimately bridges the perceived gap, making the Jangama the path and the vehicle for grace.
Shata Sthala
Primary Sthala: Bhakta. This is Bhakti in its purest, most essential form devoid of any other quality but love and longing. The Bhakta here is the perfect devotee, whose only identity is that of one who calls for God.
Supporting Sthala: Prasadi. The entire vachana is a plea for Prasada (grace). The “life” that is sought is the ultimate Prasada, which cannot be earned but only received as a gift in response to such heartfelt surrender.
Practical Integration
Arivu (Awareness): Become aware of the inner feeling of spiritual loneliness or thirst. Instead of suppressing it, give it a voice. Use this feeling of “lostness” as the fuel for your prayer.
Achara (Personal Discipline): The discipline here is the discipline of humility. Regularly practice letting go of the ego’s pretense of control and self-sufficiency. consciously adopt the inner stance of a helpless child before the Divine.
Kayaka (Sacred Action): Let your work be an extension of this cry. Offer your actions as a plea, not as an achievement. Work with the feeling, “I can do nothing without You.”
Dasoha (Communal Offering): Share your vulnerability. In the Sangha, it is a great Dasoha to be authentic and to express one’s struggles, giving others permission to shed their spiritual masks and connect with their own heartfelt cry.
Modern Application
The Modern Malady: Modern humanity, despite its technological prowess, often feels existentially lost a “calf in the forest” of consumerism, digital noise, and fractured identities. We suffer from a deep, unnamed anxiety and a thirst for authentic connection that we try to quench with superficial substitutes.
The Liberative Application: This vachana offers liberation through surrender. It tells us we can stop trying to “figure it all out” and simply admit our deep, spiritual need. The path to peace is to stop running, acknowledge we are lost, and cry out from the heart for the source of true life and meaning. It replaces the anxiety of control with the peace of surrender.
Essence
A lost calf’s cry in the wood’s deep night,
Its only strength, a plea for light.
So my soul calls, with every breath,
For the life that saves from the death of death.
Metaphysical & Multidimensional Details: Metaphysically, the “calf” is the Jivatman (individual soul). The “Mother” is the Paramatman (universal Soul). The “forest” is the realm of Avidya (ignorance). The cry is the power of the divine name (Nada-Brahman) reverberating through the individual, which has the inherent power to dissolve the ignorance and reveal the pre-existing unity. The “life” granted is the dawn of this knowledge (Jnana).
Universal Human Message: In the face of life’s ultimate questions and sufferings, our greatest strength lies in embracing our vulnerability. The most powerful prayer is not a list of requests, but a sincere cry for help from a heart that knows it is lost without its source. This raw honesty has the power to bridge the greatest of distances.

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