Now then, this works on a little plan. Let us consider the breakdown of a single kalpa. It consists of four yugas. Yuga: that means an āepoch.ā Number one is called krita, or sometimes satya. And these names are based on the Hindu game of dice. There are four throws in their game, and krita means the perfect throw; the throw of four. Number two is treta, the throw of three. Number three is dwapara, the throw of two, and number four is kaliāthatās the worst throw, the throw of value one.
You will see that these yugas divide up a period of 4,320,000 years. I never remember numbers too well. So the first yuga is 1,780,000 years long. The second is 1,296,000 years. The thirdāthe dwaparaāis 864,000, and the kali yuga is 432,000.
Now, you see whatās happening here? When the manifestation starts itās as good as possible; everything is just glorious. Because you know well that if you were dreaming anything you wanted to dream you would start out by having the most luscious dreams imaginable. Now when we get, you see, to the treta yuga, something is a little bit wrong. Krita is āfour squareāāeverythingās perfect, like the symbol of the square is an ancient symbol of perfection. Treta is the triangleāsomethingās missing; thereās a little bit of uncertainty, and danger now enters. By the time we get to dwapara, the forces of light and darkness are equalāduality, the pair. But when we get to kali, the force of darkness overcomes.
But now, you see, what happens is: if you take one third of the treta yuga as being on the bad side, half of the dwapara yuga as being on the bad side, and all of the kali yuga, and you add those figures up, you will get the bad side occupying only one third of the total time. So whatās going on here? It is not quite a situation, you seeāit is not a view of the cosmos in which good and evil are so evenly balanced that nothing happens. āEvilā is just troublesome enough to give āgoodā a run for its money. Itās as if the game that is being played here is playing order against chaos, but you gotta have some chaos in order to play the game of order against it. But if order wins thereās no further game. If chaos wins thereās no further game. If theyāre equally balanced itās a stalemate. So what happens is this: chaos is always losing, but is never defeated. Itās the good loser. And that is a game that is worth the candle.
Letās take playing chess. If you get an opponent who can always defeat you, you stop playing with him. If you get an opponent whom you can always defeat, you stop playing with him. But so long as there is a certain uncertainty of outcome and you win some of the time, then itās a good game. And this is simply a number symbolismāas I said, again, not to be taken literallyāof the way this thing works.
So the mythology says that we are now in the kali yuga, which started a little before 3,000 B.C.āso weāve got a long way to go to the end of it, if youāre going to take this literally. But of course, people have a way of always being in the kali yuga. We can go back to Egyptian inscriptions from 6,000 B.C., which say that the world is going hopelessly to the dogs. Thatās always been the complaint. But according to this mythology there areāyou have to realize the Lord, the Brahman, in three aspects. One is Brahma, the creative principle; two is Vishnu, the preserving principle; and three is Shiva, the destroying principle.
And Shiva is very important here. Shiva is always represented in Hindu imagery as a yogi. He is the destroyer in the sense of being the liberator, the cracker of shells so that chickens can come forth. The breaker-up of mothers so that their children can be un-smothered. The liberative destruction. The bonfire. Thatās why devotees of Shiva like to do their meditations along the banks of the Ganges where they burn dead bodiesābecause through destruction, life is constantly renewed.
Shiva has a paramour, and her name is KÄlÄ«, but that is a different word than this kali (yuga); you mustnāt confuse the two. And KÄlÄ« is much worse than Shiva. Sheās black, and she has a long, long tongue, and her teeth are like fangsābut sheās very beautiful... otherwise; has a lovely figure, but sheās black. And in one handāher right handāshe carries a scimitar, and in her left she carries a severed head hanging by the hair.
And KÄlÄ«, who is Shivaāsāyou see, Shiva is normally considered wedded; all the gods have their paramours, and theyāre all examples of the one central Selfāsheās called PÄrvatÄ«. But thatās her bright aspect. But her dark aspect is KÄlÄ«. And KÄlÄ« is the awful awfuls. The thing about all that men most dread. KÄlÄ« is outer darkness, KÄlÄ« is the end. She may be represented as a blood-sucking octopus, as a spider-mother that eats its spouse. And KÄlÄ« is the principle of total night. And yet, there are those in India like Sri Ramakrishna, for whom KÄlÄ« is the supreme mother goddess. Because she is two-faced. She is playful and terrifying, loving and devouring, destroyer and savior. And the cult of KÄlÄ« has as its importance helping one to see the light principle in the very depth of darkness.
I have some suggestions for meditation on KÄlÄ«, which you can all practice very easily. You go to the aquarium and you find out there the monsters of the deep that make you feel most uncomfortable, and you study them. So in this way, KÄlÄ« is studied by her devotees. And if you meditate on those, this will be like putting manure on the soil. And out of all this apparently morbid and dismal thinking, bright things will begin to ariseābecause you will realize that what KÄlÄ« is is the most far-out act that the supreme Self can put on. The symbol of complete alienation from itself.
So what happens, you see, is this: in the process of the game of hide-and-seek the supreme Self tries to see how far out it can get. Just like children like to sit around and have a competition as to who can make the most hideous face. And so this gets worse and worse as the time cycle goes on, untilāat the end of the kali yugaāShiva puts in an appearance, and heās all black and has ten arms, and he dances a dance called the TÄį¹įøava. And in dancing the TÄį¹įøava the whole universe is destroyed in fire. But, of course, as Shivaāhaving done this wreckageāturns around to leave the stage, you find that on the back of his head is the face of Brahma, the creator. And it starts again.