The Yoga of Divine Glories
विभूतियोग
Krishna tells Arjuna about all the amazing ways he shows up in the world. Among mountains, he is the mighty Himalayas. Among rivers, he is the Ganga. Among animals, he is the lion. Wherever you see something truly wonderful, powerful, or beautiful — that's a little spark of Krishna's greatness.
✶ Art Style: Kalamkari from Andhra Pradesh Learn more
Kalamkari literally means "pen-work" — kalam (pen) and kari (work). This ancient art from Andhra Pradesh uses a bamboo or date palm stick sharpened into a pen, dipped in natural dyes made from plants and minerals. Artists draw intricate outlines of gods, flowers, and the famous Tree of Life motif, then fill them with earthy colors. The Srikalahasti school focuses on freehand temple hangings, while the Machilipatnam school uses hand-carved blocks for printing on fabric. The result looks like a beautiful, detailed textile come to life.
Signature Elements
- • Fine pen-drawn outlines with natural dye fills
- • Elaborate scrolling vine and floral borders
- • Tree of Life motif
- • Textile-like patterning throughout
Did you know?
Making Kalamkari fabric involves 23 steps — including soaking the cloth in buffalo milk and myrobalan solution! The entire process can take weeks, and the natural dyes mean no two pieces ever look exactly the same.
भूय एव महाबाहो शृणु मे परमं वचः। यत्तेऽहं प्रीयमाणाय वक्ष्यामि हितकाम्यया॥
KrishnaKrishna says, "Listen once more, O mighty-armed Arjuna, to My supreme word. I am telling you this deepest teaching because you are dear to Me, and because I want what is good for you." The greatest secret is not given to just anyone — it is shared, like a present, with a friend who is ready and who is loved.
न मे विदुः सुरगणाः प्रभवं न महर्षयः। अहमादिर्हि देवानां महर्षीणां च सर्वशः॥
KrishnaKrishna says, "Neither the gods nor the great sages know My origin, because I am the very beginning of them all." Even the wisest beings in the universe cannot point to where the source of everything came from — because the source has no beginning. It is what everything else begins from.
यो मामजमनादिं च वेत्ति लोकमहेश्वरम्। असम्मूढः स मर्त्येषु सर्वपापैः प्रमुच्यते॥
KrishnaKrishna says, "Whoever truly knows Me as the unborn, the beginningless, the great Lord of all the worlds, is not confused — and among all people, he is set free from every wrong and sorrow." When you understand that there is one deathless source behind everything that changes, the heavy weight of fear and mistakes falls away.
बुद्धिर्ज्ञानमसम्मोहः क्षमा सत्यं दमः शमः। सुखं दुःखं भवोऽभावो भयं चाभयमेव च॥
KrishnaKrishna says that intelligence, wisdom, clear thinking, patience, truthfulness, self-control, and calm — and even happiness and sorrow, being born and passing away, fear and fearlessness — all of these come from Him. Every feeling and every quality you have, big or small, rises from the one source.
अहिंसा समता तुष्टिस्तपो दानं यशोऽयशः। भवन्ति भावा भूतानां मत्त एव पृथग्विधाः॥
KrishnaKrishna says, "Non-violence, evenness of mind, contentment, self-discipline, generosity, fame and disgrace — all these different states of living beings arise from Me alone." Whatever good qualities shine in a person, the spark behind them comes from the one source.
महर्षयः सप्त पूर्वे चत्वारो मनवस्तथा। मद्भावा मानसा जाता येषां लोक इमाः प्रजाः॥
KrishnaKrishna says, "The seven great sages, the four ancient ones, and the Manus were all born from My mind, sharing My nature — and from them came all the creatures of this world." At the very dawn of creation, the first wise beings sprang from the Creator's thought, and every family in the world flows down from them like branches from one root.
एतां विभूतिं योगं च मम यो वेत्ति तत्त्वतः। सोऽविकम्पेन योगेन युज्यते नात्र संशयः॥
KrishnaKrishna says, "Whoever truly understands this glory and power of Mine becomes joined to Me by an unshakeable yoga — of this there is no doubt." When you really see that all the greatness in the world points back to one source, you feel close to that source, and nothing can knock that closeness loose.
अहं सर्वस्य प्रभवो मत्तः सर्वं प्रवर्तते। इति मत्वा भजन्ते मां बुधा भावसमन्विताः॥
KrishnaKrishna says: "I am the source of everything. From Me the whole universe flows out, like water from one great spring." When wise people truly understand this — that one source is behind every star, every river, every living thing — their hearts fill with love, and they worship that source with all their feeling.
मच्चित्ता मद्गतप्राणा बोधयन्तः परस्परम्। कथयन्तश्च मां नित्यं तुष्यन्ति च रमन्ति च॥
KrishnaKrishna describes his loving friends: their minds rest on him, their whole lives are turned toward him, and they help wake each other up to the truth. They keep telling stories about him, again and again, and they never grow bored. They feel glad and full and happy — just from speaking of the one they love.
तेषां सततयुक्तानां भजतां प्रीतिपूर्वकम्। ददामि बुद्धियोगं तं येन मामुपयान्ति ते॥
KrishnaKrishna makes a promise: to those who are always with him and worship him with love, he himself gives the yoga of understanding — a clear inner wisdom — and by that gift they find their way to him. You don't have to earn it all on your own. When you love with a full heart, the understanding is given to you, like a light handed to you in the dark.
तेषामेवानुकम्पार्थमहमज्ञानजं तमः। नाशयाम्यात्मभावस्थो ज्ञानदीपेन भास्वता॥
KrishnaOut of pure kindness, Krishna says, he lives inside the hearts of those who love him, and there he destroys the darkness that ignorance makes — using the bright, shining lamp of knowledge. One small flame can clear away a whole room of dark. That is what knowing the source does inside you.
परं ब्रह्म परं धाम पवित्रं परमं भवान्। पुरुषं शाश्वतं दिव्यमादिदेवमजं विभुम्॥
ArjunaArjuna can hold it in no longer. He cries out to Krishna: "You are the Supreme Brahman — the highest reality! You are the supreme home and the supreme purifier. You are the eternal divine Person, the very first God, unborn, and present everywhere at once." All the awe in his heart pours out in praise.
आहुस्त्वामृषयः सर्वे देवर्षिर्नारदस्तथा। असितो देवलो व्यासः स्वयं चैव ब्रवीषि मे॥
ArjunaArjuna keeps praising: "All the great sages say this about You! The divine sage Narada says it, and Asita, and Devala, and the mighty Vyasa. And now You Yourself are telling me the very same thing." It is as if everything the wise ones had taught him is coming true before his own eyes.
सर्वमेतदृतं मन्ये यन्मां वदसि केशव। न हि ते भगवन्व्यक्तिं विदुर्देवा न दानवाः॥
ArjunaArjuna says with all his heart: "Everything You tell me, O Keshava, I hold to be completely true." Then he adds something amazing: "Not even the gods, not even the demons, can fully understand how You appear and where You come from." The mightiest beings in all the worlds cannot fathom Krishna — and yet Arjuna simply trusts him.
स्वयमेवात्मनात्मानं वेत्थ त्वं पुरुषोत्तम। भूतभावन भूतेश देवदेव जगत्पते॥
Arjuna"You alone know Yourself, by Yourself," Arjuna says. No one else can see all the way to the bottom of who Krishna is — only Krishna can. Then Arjuna calls him by his great names: Supreme Person, source of every being, Lord of all beings, God of gods, ruler of the whole world. Only the infinite can measure the infinite.
वक्तुमर्हस्यशेषेण दिव्या ह्यात्मविभूतयः। याभिर्विभूतिभिर्लोकानिमांस्त्वं व्याप्य तिष्ठसि॥
ArjunaArjuna begs Krishna to tell him all of his divine glories — every single one, leaving nothing out. These glories, called vibhutis, are the ways Krishna shines through the world. With them he fills and holds up all the worlds. Arjuna wants to hear about them the way a child wants to hear every part of a wonderful story.
कथं विद्यामहं योगिंस्त्वां सदा परिचिन्तयन्। केषु केषु च भावेषु चिन्त्योऽसि भगवन्मया॥
ArjunaArjuna asks a very practical question: "How do I keep You in my mind all the time? In which forms should I think of You?" He wants to know where to look so that whatever he sees reminds him of Krishna. It is the question of someone who wants to remember God not just at prayer time, but all day long.
विस्तरेणात्मनो योगं विभूतिं च जनार्दन। भूयः कथय तृप्तिर्हि शृण्वतो नास्ति मेऽमृतम्॥
Arjuna"Tell me again, in full detail, of Your power and glory," Arjuna says. He just cannot get enough. He calls Krishna's words amrita — nectar, the sweet drink that gives life and never grows stale. The more Arjuna listens, the thirstier he becomes, the way the best stories make you say "again, again!"
हन्त ते कथयिष्यामि दिव्या ह्यात्मविभूतयः। प्राधान्यतः कुरुश्रेष्ठ नास्त्यन्तो विस्तरस्य मे॥
Krishna"Very well," Krishna says, "I will tell you My chief divine glories." But he gives a gentle warning first: there is no end to how far he stretches. He can only name the main ones, because the whole list could go on forever. He is beginning a song that, in truth, could never reach its last line.
अहमात्मा गुडाकेश सर्वभूताशयस्थितः। अहमादिश्च मध्यं च भूतानामन्त एव च॥
KrishnaKrishna begins the listing with its deepest truth: "I am the Self that sits in the heart of every living being." The same inner spark of life and awareness shines in everyone. He is the beginning of all beings, their middle, and their end — where they come from, what holds them up, and where they return. This is the heart of the whole chapter.
आदित्यानामहं विष्णुर्ज्योतिषां रविरंशुमान्। मरीचिर्मरुतामस्मि नक्षत्राणामहं शशी॥
KrishnaNow the listing of glories truly begins. Among the twelve Adityas (the sun-gods), Krishna is Vishnu, the greatest. Among all lights he is the blazing sun, full of rays. Among the Maruts (the storm-winds) he is Marichi, their chief. And among all the stars of the night, he is the moon. Wherever something is the brightest or highest of its kind, that is Krishna shining through.
वेदानां सामवेदोऽस्मि देवानामस्मि वासवः। इन्द्रियाणां मनश्चास्मि भूतानामस्मि चेतना॥
KrishnaKrishna says: "Of the four Vedas, I am the Sama-Veda, the one that is sung. Among the gods I am Indra, their king. Among the senses I am the mind that guides them all. And in every living being, I am the consciousness — the spark of awareness that lets you know that you are alive." Wherever something is the brightest or most alive of its kind, that brightness is Him.
रुद्राणां शङ्करश्चास्मि वित्तेशो यक्षरक्षसाम्। वसूनां पावकश्चास्मि मेरुः शिखरिणामहम्॥
KrishnaKrishna says: "Among the eleven Rudras I am Shankara — Shiva. Among the yakshas and rakshasas I am Kubera, the keeper of all treasure. Among the shining Vasus I am Agni, the fire that purifies everything it touches. And among all the mountain-peaks of the world, I am Meru, the golden mountain at the very centre of creation." Wherever a thing rises highest, that height is Him.
पुरोधसां च मुख्यं मां विद्धि पार्थ बृहस्पतिम्। सेनानीनामहं स्कन्दः सरसामस्मि सागरः॥
KrishnaKrishna says: "Among all the priests, know Me as the chief — Brihaspati, the wise teacher and priest of the gods themselves. Among all generals I am Skanda, the brave commander who leads the army of heaven. And among all the waters of the world — every lake and pond and river — I am the ocean, into which they all finally flow."
महर्षीणां भृगुरहं गिरामस्म्येकमक्षरम्। यज्ञानां जपयज्ञोऽस्मि स्थावराणां हिमालयः॥
KrishnaKrishna says: "Among the great sages I am Bhrigu. Among all words, I am the single sacred syllable Om. Among all the ways of offering to the divine, I am japa — the quiet, steady repeating of a holy name, the simplest offering of all. And among all the still, unmoving things of the earth, I am the Himalaya." The greatest word can be the shortest, and the greatest offering the quietest.
अश्वत्थः सर्ववृक्षाणां देवर्षीणां च नारदः। गन्धर्वाणां चित्ररथः सिद्धानां कपिलो मुनिः॥
KrishnaKrishna says: "Among all the trees of the world I am the Ashvattha, the sacred peepul. Among the divine sages I am Narada, who travels everywhere singing of God. Among the heavenly musicians I am Chitraratha. And among the perfected ones — the great souls who have reached the goal — I am the sage Kapila." Wherever something gathers life and people around it, that gathering is Him.
उच्चैःश्रवसमश्वानां विद्धि माममृतोद्भवम्। ऐरावतं गजेन्द्राणां नराणां च नराधिपम्॥
KrishnaKrishna says: "Among all horses, know Me as Uchchaihshravas, the snow-white horse that rose from the nectar when the gods churned the ocean. Among the great elephants I am Airavata, the white elephant Indra rides. And among all human beings, I am the king, the one who leads and protects his people."
आयुधानामहं वज्रं धेनूनामस्मि कामधुक्। प्रजनश्चास्मि कन्दर्पः सर्पाणामस्मि वासुकिः॥
KrishnaKrishna says: "Among all weapons I am the vajra, the thunderbolt. Among cows I am Kamadhenu, the cow who grants every wish. I am the loving power that brings new life into the world. And among the serpents I am Vasuki, their king." From the mightiest weapon to the most giving cow to the spark of love that begins every life — wherever there is greatness, it is His.
अनन्तश्चास्मि नागानां वरुणो यादसामहम्। पितॄणामर्यमा चास्मि यमः संयमतामहम्॥
KrishnaKrishna keeps showing Arjuna where to find him. Among the great serpents he is Ananta, the endless one who never comes to a stop. Among the deities of water he is Varuna, who rules the seas and rivers. Among the ancestors he is Aryaman, the eldest and noblest, and among all who keep order and justice he is Yama, the steady lord of the law. Wherever something holds, guards, or endures, that strength is a spark of him.
प्रह्लादश्चास्मि दैत्यानां कालः कलयतामहम्। मृगाणां च मृगेन्द्रोऽहं वैनतेयश्च पक्षिणाम्॥
KrishnaKrishna points to the brightest spark in each kind. Among the demons he is Prahlada, the one demon-child whose pure love for God outshone his whole fierce family. Among all who count and measure he is Time itself, which counts every day for everyone. Among the wild beasts he is the lion, the king of the forest, and among the birds he is Garuda, the mighty mount of Vishnu. Even in unlikely places, the best of its kind is a glimpse of him.
पवनः पवतामस्मि रामः शस्त्रभृतामहम्। झषाणां मकरश्चास्मि स्रोतसामस्मि जाह्नवी॥
KrishnaKrishna keeps naming the greatest of each kind. Among all things that clean and freshen, he is the wind, which sweeps the whole sky clear. Among warriors who carry weapons, he is Rama, the noblest of heroes. Among the creatures of the water he is the mighty makara, and among all the flowing rivers he is the Ganga, holiest of them all. Wherever something is purest or strongest of its kind, that is his glory.
सर्गाणामादिरन्तश्च मध्यं चैवाहमर्जुन। अध्यात्मविद्या विद्यानां वादः प्रवदतामहम्॥
KrishnaKrishna says he is the whole arc of everything that is made — the beginning, the middle, and the end of all creations. Among the many things people study, he is the highest study of all: the science of the Self, the knowing of who we really are inside. And among people who argue and debate, he is not the shouting or the tricks, but vada — the honest reasoning that leads straight to the truth.
अक्षराणामकारोऽस्मि द्वन्द्वः सामासिकस्य च। अहमेवाक्षयः कालो धाताहं विश्वतोमुखः॥
KrishnaKrishna shows that he hides even inside small everyday things. Among all the letters he is 'A', the very first sound, the breath every other letter is built upon. Among the ways words join together he is the dvandva, the joining that means "and." He is endless Time, which never wears out, and he is the great Sustainer who faces every direction at once, holding up the whole world on every side.
मृत्युः सर्वहरश्चाहमुद्भवश्च भविष्यताम्। कीर्तिः श्रीर्वाक्च नारीणां स्मृतिर्मेधा धृतिः क्षमा॥
KrishnaKrishna says he is Death, the great taker that carries everything away in the end — but he is also the origin, the coming-to-be of all the things that are still to be born. He is both sides of the turning wheel, the ending and the beginning. And among the gentle, shining qualities he names seven that are treasures: fame, good fortune, beautiful speech, memory, intelligence, steadfastness, and patience.
बृहत्साम तथा साम्नां गायत्री छन्दसामहम्। मासानां मार्गशीर्षोऽहमृतूनां कुसुमाकरः॥
KrishnaKrishna names the loveliest of each kind. Among the sacred chants of the Sama Veda he is the Brihat-saman, the greatest hymn. Among all the poetic meters he is the Gayatri, the most honoured measure of all. Among the months he is Margashirsha, the fresh and bountiful month, and among the seasons he is spring — the flower-bearing time when the whole world bursts into blossom.
द्यूतं छलयतामस्मि तेजस्तेजस्विनामहम्। जयोऽस्मि व्यवसायोऽस्मि सत्त्वं सत्त्ववतामहम्॥
KrishnaKrishna says, "Wherever there is a spark of greatness, that spark is Me." He is the splendour that shines in brilliant people, the victory that crowns a hard-won battle, and the steady resolve that refuses to give up. He is even the goodness inside good-hearted people. Anything truly strong or bright or determined is a little flame borrowed from him.
वृष्णीनां वासुदेवोऽस्मि पाण्डवानां धनञ्जयः। मुनीनामप्यहं व्यासः कवीनामुशना कविः॥
KrishnaKrishna keeps naming the finest of each kind. Among his own Yadava clan he is Vasudeva — that is, himself. Among the five Pandava brothers he is Arjuna, called Dhananjaya, the winner of wealth. Among silent sages he is Vyasa, who arranged the Vedas, and among great poets he is Ushanas, the wise Shukra. Even Arjuna, sitting right there, is named as a spark of the divine.
दण्डो दमयतामस्मि नीतिरस्मि जिगीषताम्। मौनं चैवास्मि गुह्यानां ज्ञानं ज्ञानवतामहम्॥
KrishnaKrishna says he is the firm but fair authority of rulers who keep their kingdoms safe, and the clever strategy of those who want to win. Among all secrets, he is silence — for the deepest things are kept by saying nothing at all. And among the wise, he is the very wisdom inside them. Sometimes the greatest power is knowing when not to speak.
यच्चापि सर्वभूतानां बीजं तदहमर्जुन। न तदस्ति विना यत्स्यान्मया भूतं चराचरम्॥
KrishnaKrishna calls Arjuna by name and tells him the heart of it all: "I am the seed of every single being." Just as a tiny seed holds a whole tree inside it, he is the hidden source that everything grows from. And nothing at all — nothing that walks or swims or flies, nothing that stands still like a rock or a mountain — could exist without him.
नान्तोऽस्ति मम दिव्यानां विभूतीनां परन्तप। एष तूद्देशतः प्रोक्तो विभूतेर्विस्तरो मया॥
KrishnaKrishna calls Arjuna "scorcher of foes" and tells him a wonderful thing: "There is no end to my divine glories." All the marvels he has just listed — the sun, the ocean, the mountain, the holy river — are only a few examples, a tiny taste. If he tried to name them all, the list would never, ever finish.
यद्यद्विभूतिमत्सत्त्वं श्रीमदूर्जितमेव वा। तत्तदेवावगच्छ त्वं मम तेजोंशसम्भवम्॥
KrishnaKrishna gives Arjuna one simple rule to carry away: wherever you see something glorious, beautiful, or mighty, know that it has sprung from just a tiny fragment of his splendour. The brightest star, the bravest heart, the most golden treasure — each one is a single spark thrown off from his endless light.
अथवा बहुनैतेन किं ज्ञातेन तवार्जुन। विष्टभ्याहमिदं कृत्स्नमेकांशेन स्थितो जगत्॥
KrishnaKrishna ends the long, dazzling list with a question and a wonder. "But what need is there, Arjuna, to know all these details one by one?" Then comes the greatest line of the chapter: "I stand here, holding up this whole entire universe — and I do it with a single fragment of Myself." Everything that exists rests on just one small part of him.