When you hear that someone has a “pastime umbrella,” you probably think that it’s a smaller object turned into an umbrella for play. Either that or it’s an umbrella used only for fun, not necessarily for protection against the rain. You know, such and such person walks around with an umbrella for no reason, like Linus from the Peanuts with his blanket. Or such and such child loves to play with their tiny umbrella, which allows them to imitate the adults. For the Supreme Lord, the pastime umbrella is a magnificent hill that is so large that it takes many hours just to circumambulate.
Why would you think of circumambulating a hill? Where would you get that idea? What purpose would that serve?
Parikrama, or circumambulating, is a way of showing respect in the Vedic tradition. If we see our parents or grandparents after a long time, we may give them a hug. Indeed, this is a sign of respect. If you just say, “Hey, what’s up?”, you’re not really showing so much respect. That’s how you treat acquaintances. That’s how you treat people who you don’t know that well. The hug is a gesture of true affection. It is thus reserved for people you really care about.
The show of humility also benefits the individual personally. The false ego, or ahankara, is both the initial cause of the fall into the material world and the cause for the continual stay in the land that is known for birth and death. There is an ego for sure, as we are all individuals. As an individual, I refer to myself as “I”, but under the sway of the false ego I don’t really know who that “I” refers to. I think it refers to my body, my strength, my vision, and my intelligence. I even sometimes think it refers to my house, my family, and my income.
The “I” really refers to the spirit soul, which is the essence of identity. That soul is the same in quality in me as it is in you. You and me are equal when you strip everything away. Ah, but to strip such things away without actually physically removing them, thereby only removing their influence with respect to vision, is very difficult. Humility offers us a way to remove the “false” aspect from the ego. If I openly admit with sincerity that someone else is superior to me, that I am obliged to touch their feet, I recognize that I am not everything. I don’t have everything, and neither will I ever. I should show respect because others are the same as me, and when I reach an older age, I will appreciate respect offered to me by the younger generation.
Circumambulating is a better way of offering respect. It is a tradition not typically applied today to other people. It is shown more towards objects of reverence, such as deities, temples and places of pilgrimage. We can understand the purpose to circumambulation as it relates to showing respect by looking to a famous story involving Lord Ganesha. By circumambulating his parents three times, he acknowledged that he had acquired all knowledge. Shiva and Parvati are the guardians of this material world, which is known as durga, or difficult to overcome. By respecting them, one is able to live here very nicely. Ganesha circled them three times, showing that they were everything to him.
“That supreme abode is called unmanifested and infallible, and it is the supreme destination. When one goes there, he never comes back. That is My supreme abode.” (Lord Krishna, Bhagavad-gita, 8.21)
This hill in Vrindavana was once the Supreme Lord’s pastime umbrella. He lifted it in sport after the king of heaven became angry over being slighted. The residents didn’t purposefully set out to anger him. Shri Krishna, the original Personality of Godhead, was manifesting His pastimes on the earthly realm at the time. He was in Vrindavana as a young child, taken care of by Nanda Maharaja and mother Yashoda. Krishna asked Nanda one year to skip the annual Indra puja and instead worship the neighboring hill named Govardhana. Nanda and the residents agreed, and everyone was happy afterwards.
Krishna can lift hills in sport and turn them into massive umbrellas, and He can also hear any prayer offered His way. Those which catch His ear are the ones that relate to serving Him. Service to Him is more than just a way to purify our existence. Service to Him is the very essence of our existence. In any other state we are impure. Thankfully Shri Krishna leaves Govardhana Hill and other important objects here to allow us to reclaim our essence.
In Closing:
Service to God is our real essence,
Thankfully we have Govardhana’s presence.
Served as pastime umbrella one time,
When residents struck by Indra unkind.
For Krishna it was easy to lift,
Delivering helping hand swift.
If such an object an umbrella He can make,
Then why not your prayers He can take?
