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Deepavali- The Inner Lamp

When the House Cleans and the Inner Lamp Lights - a Diwali Story (with a secret)

I started cleaning my cupboard this week — the usual: socks that had never met their pair, a spoon that clearly belonged to another life, and that one shirt whose only crime was surviving too many festivals. As I dusted, packed, and swept, the neighbours began to hang strings of lights. Two childhood friends with family landed from a different city to spend Diwali with us.

Sweets appeared in steel wares like surprise guests. Children from the neighbouring house practiced the controlled art of mischief called “cracker-pop.” The city smelled of sugar and fuel and a very particular kind of cheer.

Like most of us, I would always half-know Diwali: Rama’s return to Ayodhya, lights everywhere, lamps on windowsills, and a lot of cleaning. But I asked myself - as the broom did a slow explanatory arc over the floor — could there be more to the scrub-and-illuminate routine?

The answer, as always, was: yes. And it makes the festival even more interesting.

Not one story, but many doors to the same light

Diwali is a mosaic. Different regions and traditions point to different stories - and that plurality is its strength.

In large parts of North India the narrative is Rāma’s return to Ayodhyā (Valmiki Rāmāyaṇa tradition): the city lights the path for the homecoming of dharma.

In parts of the South and East the celebration marks Shree Krishna’s victory over the demon Naraka — a drama of waking up to freedom from fear.

For many in Bengal the night is Kali-pūjā — fierce compassion dispelling injustice. Jains remember Mahāvīra’s moksha, Sikhs mark Bandi Chhor Divas (release of the imprisoned), and agriculturally it is also a harvest/financial new-year marker in various regions (accounts, ledgers, and rice baskets are ceremonially sweetened).

All these stories point toward one human movement: from darkness (fear, ignorance, division) to light (welcome, knowledge, integration).

The ritual logic: cleaning, light, sound - what are we really doing?

When we sweep, light candles, and let off fireworks, we enact three psychological moves:

 

  1. Clear the stage (housekeeping): sweep away clutter → the mind can breathe. Pragmatic, practical, symbolic.
  2. Place the lamp (Deepam): the lamp is small, fragile, but steady - an emblem of Jnana (knowledge) or awareness. Lighting it is an invitation to inner attention.
  3. Make some noise (crackers/feasting): celebration as psychological punctuation - proclaiming to the world (and to our own hearts) that something has shifted.

 

The outward actions are helpful. But if we stop at the outward, Diwali remains a very good Instagram reel.

Now the secret - Adhyāropa and Apavāda on Diwali

Vedanta gives us a beautiful pair of teaching tools:

Adhyāropa (provisional superimposition - teaching by imagery and metaphor) and

Apavāda (the subsequent negation - revealing the higher truth).

Adhyāropa for Diwali: the lamps, the puja, the sweets, the fireworks - these are teaching symbols. They hold our attention, make the household receptive, create liminal space. They are the language the heart understands.

Apavāda for Diwali: the inner meaning revealed by the symbols - that all multiplicity is pervaded by the one Light. The little lamp points to the undying Self. As the Upaniṣads tell us:

īśāvāsyam idaṁ sarvam - “All this is pervaded by Īśvara.” (Īśāvāsyopaniṣad 1)

sarvaṁ khalv idaṁ brahma — “All this indeed is Brahman.” (Chāndogya U.)

Ahaṁ brahmāsmi — “I am Brahman.” (The lamp is pointing inward.) ( Brihadaranyka Upanishad

1. Deepavali – The Name (Adhyāropa → Apavāda)

 

  • Adhyāropa (the literal story/teaching symbol): Deepa = lamp, Avali = row → “row of lamps” literally lighting up the city. The lamps celebrate Rama’s return to Ayodhya, the defeat of Ravana, and the restoration of dharma.
  • Apavāda (the deeper, inner truth): The row of lamps is a metaphor for the illumination of awareness in the mind, dispelling inner darkness (ignorance, attachment, fear). Victory over Ravana = victory over the ego, desires, and inner darkness.

 

2. Rama

 

  • Adhyāropa: Hero of the Ramayana, son of King Dasharatha, returns after 14 years of exile. Embodiment of dharma, virtue, and ideal leadership.
  • Apavāda: Symbolizes the awakened Self (Ātman) in everyone, which acts with truth and righteousness when aligned with higher consciousness. Rama is the inner Self that triumphs over ignorance (Ravana).

 

3. Ayodhya

 

  • Adhyāropa: Rama’s capital city, celebrated and illuminated with lamps. Represents community, home, and order restored.
  • Apavāda: Represents the inner mind/field of consciousness. When the Self (Rama) returns, the inner city (Ayodhya) is lit up - the mind becomes clear, peaceful, and aligned.

 

4. Ravana

 

  • Adhyāropa: The demon king of Lanka, abducted Sita, defeated by Rama. Embodiment of evil, greed, and adharmic power.
  • Apavāda: Symbolizes the inner vices - ego, attachment, anger, and fear - which must be recognized and transcended for dharma (inner order) to prevail.

 

5. Puranas & Variants

 

  • Adhyāropa: The textual stories in Padma, Skanda, Vishnu Puranas expand the Deepavali celebration - Narakasura’s defeat, Lakshmi puja, harvest/new year observances.
  • Apavāda: These stories are tools for teaching dharma and awareness through symbols. Each narrative emphasizes a principle: liberation, prosperity, purification, and alignment with the eternal.

 

6. Naraka / Narakasura

 

  • Adhyāropa: A demon subdued by Krishna (or Rama, in some traditions) before Diwali, associated with liberation from tyranny.
  • Apavāda: Represents the inner bondage of ignorance, fear, and wrong identification. Liberation of Naraka = inner liberation from all mental and emotional obstacles.

 

7. The Festival Itself

 

  • Adhyāropa: Lighting lamps, feasting, fireworks, cleaning homes - enactment of joy, welcome, and celebration.
  • Apavāda: The real festival is the illumination of consciousness, the recognition that “All this is Īśvara” (īśāvāsyam idaṁ sarvaṁ) - the Self alone shines, within and without.

 

In essence:

Deepavali is a living teaching, where every name, character, and act is a symbol:

Literal Story:                   Rama defeats Ravana

Inner Truth:                    Self ( Atman) overcomes ego ( Ahamkara) and ignorance

Literal Story:                   Narakasura vanquished

Inner Truth:                    Moksha ( Liberation) from the bondage of samsara

Literal Story:                   Rows of Lamps ( Deep- Avali)

Inner Truth:                    Continuous awareness – inner light

Literal Story:                   Feast and Sweets

Inner Truth:                    Sharing grace, joy and inner abundance

In short: the festival’s outward forms (adhyāropa) are invitations; the inward realization (apavāda) is the destination. Light the lamp - and then ask who it is that watches the light.

These are not party-tricks. They are the map: outward ritual → inward inquiry → the realization that the ‘seer’ and the ‘seen’ are not two.

There is a popular tale of a village man who hung a giant lamp outside his home every Diwali but never entered in the evenings. His neighbour asked why. He said, “I am lighting it for everyone passing by.” The neighbour retorted, “Then why do you leave your own house in darkness?” The man blinked and said, “Ah - I never thought of that.”

We become that man when we only stage Diwali externally. The festival works best when the lamp we place outside also lights the room inside - the inner room of attention, the cupboard of our heart, the shelf holding our unexamined habits.

How to make this Diwali both sparkling and meaningful (practical takeaways)

 

  1. Do the cleaning slowly: make the act meditative. Each sweep a small renunciation of habit.
  2. Light one lamp with intention: pause before you light; breathe in, think of the quality you invite (clarity, courage, kindness).
  3. Ask one inward question: “Who is lighting the lamp?” Sit for one minute and notice whether the question lands as idea or as presence.
  4. Share a short story, not a sermon: invite one guest to tell why Diwali matters to them - personal witness is the fastest translator of tradition.
  5. Turn the noise into gratitude: if you light crackers, do so as a brief common punctuation - then bow to the stillness that follows.
  6. End with a simple sentence for the table: e.g., “May this light remind us that all that is here is Īśvara.”

 

I would like to leave you with a little mystery …

Diwali is a public ritual that secretly trains you for private awakening. The lamps still the street, and sometimes - if you are gentle with the light - they still your mind long enough for a tiny recognition to rise: that the guest you waited for was never outside, but always here.

So, keep the sweets. Keep the guests. And do sweep the cupboards. But, Remember to stand in the doorway with the lamp and ask: who is welcoming whom?

Happy Diwali  may the little lamp you light open the field where the last big darkness dissolves.

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