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Psyche explores the Hindu myth of Daksha, a cosmic administrator whose pride led to his beheading by Shiva and resurrection with a goat's head as a lesson in humility.
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Browse era →This episode delves into the powerful Hindu myth of Daksha, one of the Prajapatis (cosmic administrators) whose obsession with order and control ultimately destroyed him. The story centers on Daksha's daughter Sati, who chose to marry the wild, untameable god Shiva against her father's wishes. When Daksha deliberately excluded Shiva from a grand cosmic sacrifice, Sati confronted her father about the disrespect, leading to public humiliation and her tragic self-immolation through yogic fire. Shiva's devastating grief and rage resulted in the complete destruction of Daksha's ceremony and his beheading as poetic justice for trying to exclude the divine from cosmic order. The myth's profound symbolism emerges in Daksha's resurrection with a goat's head - a permanent reminder of his arrogance and the transformative power of true humility. Psyche presents this as a deeply relevant modern parable about what happens when spiritual practice becomes a costume for ego, when rules become more important than soul, and when human pride attempts to command the divine. The story ultimately shows that while one can return from spiritual arrogance, the transformation is permanent and necessary for authentic growth.
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