7 Easy Ganesha Clay Modelling Painting | Mouldit Ganesha | Hobby Ideas ganesha mandir mein

Easy Ganesha Clay Modelling Painting easy solution



Here’s an adorable DIY Mouldit Ganesha to help you get into the festive mood 💫

Made just using Fevicryl Mouldit and Fevicryl Acrylic Colours, this will surely help you to kick-start your festive preparations!

As tradition has it, Lord Shiva was often away and Parvati was frequently occupied by thoughts of a son who could relieve her of her loneliness. One day, while bathing, she was absorbed in thoughts of this nature and inadvertently molded the herbal paste she was using to wash her body with, into a small manly figure. As soon as Parvati wished it had life, the idol transformed into a living child. And so she gave birth to Ganesha, out of her intense desire, by sharing every inch of herself with nature (the herbs with which the paste was made and with which she had rubbed her whole body).

The Goddess asked her child to guard her door and ward off any intruders or interruptions while she finished bathing, so when lord Shiva returned home, he found a stranger at his wife’s door. Honoring his mother’s wishes, Ganesha refused to let him in, and Shiva unleashed his fury by chopping his head off. When Parvati came out and saw what had happened, she was deeply hurt and demanded to have her son’s head replaced!

Shiva ordered his attendants to bring him the first living being they saw to replace the boy’s head, and since the first thing they found was an elephant, the boy’s body was brought back to life with an elephant’s head (this is why he is also known as Gajanana, or the “elephant-headed one”). Lord Shiva then put his ganas, or unruly elements of the cosmos, under the command of this twice-born God, and named him Lord Ganesha (Lord of the ganas).

The Feminine Path of Acceptance and Allowance

Now, curving obstructions or detrimental forces was Ganesha’s inherent nature, since he was Parvati’s son (born of her alone) and in charge of warding off evil, obstacles, and obstructions to her desires even before Lord Shiva played a part in the story; this is why all the other Gods honor Ganesha before any action or impulse to restore balance in the Universe. Ganesha stands at the threshold between desire and reality, and it is by his mere presence that things are allowed to happen without hindrance or obstacle. In this sense, he represents our own feminine nature: that of allowing.

Despite a massive body with a large elephant trunk, Ganesha’s energy is light, playful, and feminine, and his vehicle is a mouse that represents human desire. Mind you, he doesn’t crush it, because without desire there would be no life. So he feeds his vehicle to promote life, yet at the same time he controls it, commanding the threshold between desire and its manifestation. Like a motherly figure, he wants us to cultivate the wisdom to choose the desires that bring us happiness and not those that promote more suffering.

All mythological and symbolic layers aside, Ganesha’s presence truly represents the Feminine within us all. It promotes love, right wisdom, good sense, and trust; it also brings prosperity and wealth to everyone; and it removes mental obstacles to encourage freedom, tolerance, flexibility, compassion, and responsibility.

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