Read this sweet pastime of Krishna – Damodara-lila. Find out how the unconquerable Lord was conquered by His mother, Yashoda.
Once, seeing that her maidservant was
engaged in different household work, mother Yashoda personally churned
butter. While she churned butter, she sang the wonderful childhood
pastimes of her son Krishna and relished thinking of Him. At that time
Krishna appeared there and was hungry. He wanted her to stop churning
the butter and feed Him first.
Mother Yashoda took her son on her lap
and started feeding Him. While Krishna was sucking the milk, mother
Yashoda smiled and enjoyed the beauty of Her child Krishna. Suddenly,
the milk which was on the stove began to boil over. Just to stop the
milk from spilling, mother Yashoda at once put Krishna aside and went to
the stove. Left in that state by His mother, Krishna became very angry,
and His lips and eyes became red in rage. He pressed His teeth and
lips, and taking up a piece of stone, He immediately broke the butter
pot. He took butter out of it, and with false tears in His eyes, He
began to eat the butter in a secluded place.
In the meantime, mother Yashoda returned
to the churning place after setting the overflowing milk pan in order.
She saw the broken pot, in which the churned yogurt had been kept. Since
she could not find her boy, she concluded that the broken pot was His
work. She smiled as she thought, “The child is very clever. After
breaking the pot He has left this place, fearing punishment.” After she
sought all over, she found her son sitting on a big wooden grinding
mortar, which was kept upside down. He was taking butter from a pot
which was hanging from the ceiling on a swing, and He was feeding it to
the monkeys.
She saw Krishna looking this way and
that way in fear of her because He was conscious of His naughty
behavior. After seeing her son so engaged, she very silently approached
Him from behind. Krishna, however, saw her coming toward Him with a
stick in her hand, and He immediately got down from the grinding mortar
and began to flee in fear. Mother Yashoda chased Him to all corners,
trying to capture the Supreme Personality of Godhead, who is never
approached even by the meditations of great yogis. In other words, the
Supreme Personality of Godhead, Krishna, who is never caught by the
yogis and speculators, was playing just like a little child for such a
great devotee as mother Yashoda. Mother Yashoda, however, could not
easily catch the fast-running child because of her thin waist and heavy
body. Still she tried to follow Him as fast as possible. Her hair
loosened, and the flowers in her hair fell to the ground. Although she
was tired, she somehow reached her naughty child and captured Him. When
He was caught, Krishna was almost on the point of crying. He smeared His
hands over His eyes, which were anointed with black eye cosmetics. The
child saw His mother’s face while she stood over Him, and His eyes
became restless from fear.
Mother Yashoda could understand that
Krishna was unnecessarily afraid, and for His benefit she wanted to
allay His fears. Being the topmost well-wisher of her child, mother
Yashoda thought, “If the child is too fearful of me, I don’t know what
will happen to Him.” Mother Yashoda then threw away her stick. In order
to punish Him, she thought of binding His hands with some ropes. She did
not know it, but it was actually impossible for her to bind the Supreme
Personality of Godhead. Mother Yashoda was thinking that Krishna was
her tiny child; she did not know that the child had no limitation. There
is no inside or outside of Him, nor beginning or end. He is unlimited
and all-pervading. Indeed, He is Himself the whole cosmic manifestation.
Still, mother Yashoda was thinking of Krishna as her child. Although He
is beyond the reach of all senses, she endeavored to bind Him to a
wooden grinding mortar. But when she tried to bind Him, she found that
the rope she was using was short by two inches. She gathered more ropes
from the house and added to it, but still she found the same shortage.
In this way, she connected all the ropes available at home, but when the
final knot was added, she saw that the rope was still two inches short.
Mother Yashoda was smiling, but she was astonished. How was it
happening?
In attempting to bind her son, she
became tired. She was perspiring, and the garland on her head fell down.
Then Lord Krishna appreciated the hard labor of His mother, and being
compassionate upon her, He agreed to be bound up by the ropes. Krishna,
playing as a human child in the house of mother Yashoda, was performing
His own selected pastimes. Of course, no one can control the Supreme
Personality of Godhead. The pure devotee surrenders himself unto the
lotus feet of the Lord, who may either protect or vanquish the
devotee. But for his part, the devotee never forgets his own position of
surrender. Similarly, the Lord also feels transcendental pleasure by
submitting Himself to the protection of the devotee. This was
exemplified by Krishna’s surrender unto His mother, Yashoda.
Krishna is the supreme bestower of all
kinds of liberation to His devotees, but the benediction which was
bestowed upon mother Yashoda was never experienced even by Lord Brahma
or Lord Shiva or the goddess of fortune.
The Supreme Personality of Godhead, who
is known as the son of Yashoda and Nanda Maharaja, is never so
completely known to the yogis and speculators. But He is easily
available to His devotees.
After binding her son, mother Yashoda
engaged herself in household affairs. At that time, bound up to the
wooden mortar, Krishna could see a pair of trees before Him which were
known as arjuna trees. The great reservoir of pleasure, Lord Sri
Krishna, thus thought to Himself, “Mother Yashoda first of all left
without feeding Me sufficient milk, and therefore I broke the pot of
yogurt and distributed the stock butter in charity to the monkeys. Now
she has bound Me up to a wooden mortar. So I shall do something more
mischievous than before.” And thus He thought of pulling down the two
very tall arjuna trees.
There is a history behind the pair of
arjuna trees. In their previous lives, the trees were born as the human
sons of Kuvera, and their names were Nalakuvara and Manigriva.
Fortunately, they came within the vision of the Lord. In their previous
lives they were cursed by the great sage Narada in order to receive the
highest benediction of seeing Lord Krishna. This benediction-curse was
bestowed upon them because of their forgetfulness due to intoxication.
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