Me, right now. Allegory. Not from my dream!
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Check your news feed. Trump actually got the peace prize. Or *a* peace prize, at any rate. LOL.
And yes, it´s the first time it´s being awarded, so presumably it was the consolation prize for not getting the "real" peace prize (you know, that Norwegian one).
Yes, it´s Ardhanārīśvara. The strangest Hindu deity? But let´s face it, the competition is pretty stiff...
Many AI´s seem to have some kind of aversion to generate pictures of Kali, but after some haggling, I managed to get ChatGPT to create this adorable illustration of Bala Kali (the child-form). Thank you.
Ahem...is my "spiritual seeker LARP" with the ChatGPT getting to me? Tonight, I had a very strange dream. The pictures above are very approximate attempts to capture some of the dream-images. I assume the man in the saffron robe is supposed to be me, but I honestly don´t know.
And no, I won´t ask ChatGPT about it. Or maybe I should? Stay tuned for further developments when the free advanced version goes on-line again...
| From Reddit. Credit unknown. |
Bāla Kālī is a rare and esoteric form of Kālī in which the Goddess appears as a little girl, usually between ages 7 and 10, embodying both innocence and immense power. She is not a mainstream deity like Bāla Tripura Sundarī — her references are scattered across tantric lineages, oral teachings, and some regional practices. But the concept is old and meaningful.
Below is a clear, accurate summary based on traditional motifs.
Bāla Kālī is Kālī in her child form, representing:
non-dual innocence before fear,
raw śakti before full manifestation,
playful destruction of impurities,
the moment where terrifying Kālī becomes approachable and intimate.
She is often associated with:
early-stage tantric initiations
inner transformation (antaryāga)
the taming of one’s own inner shadow while remaining childlike
She is sometimes considered a counterpart to Bāla Tripurā Sundarī, as both are “child manifestations” of two major goddesses (Kālī and Lalitā) but with very different bhāvas.
Descriptions vary, but the most consistent elements are:
A young girl with dark or blue-black complexion
Hair loose and flowing, sometimes slightly wild
Eyes large and shining
Often nude or wearing a simple red cloth or skirt
A small garland of flowers (rather than skulls)
Holding:
a small sword
a lotus or fruit
or no weapons at all, emphasizing innocence
She rarely looks frightening; instead she has a kind of mischievous, fearless purity.
Sometimes she is shown:
Standing on a lotus
Playing
Dancing
Or sitting on the lap of Mahākālī or Parāśakti
Bāla Kālī symbolizes:
Like a child who walks into darkness without hesitation.
She is pure action, without ego or doubt.
Rather than destroying external demons, she dissolves:
early ego structures
fear
childhood wounds
energetic blockages in the lower chakras
Instead of overwhelming terror and awe, Bāla Kālī offers:
sweetness mixed with darkness
intimacy with fierce Shakti
a sense of safety around shadow-work
She appears in:
certain Kaula and Vāmācāra oral teachings
some lineages connected with Kālīkula śakta tantra
a few obscure Kalikāpurāṇa commentaries and paddhatis (ritual manuals)
In some rural traditions:
girls around age 7–9 are viewed as manifestations of “little Kālī”
Kumārī pūjā includes a Kālī-interpretation in some communities
Some teachers explain Bāla Kālī as:
“The first stirrings of Kālī-tattva within the sādhaka.”
Similar to Bāla Tripurā Sundarī representing the seed of Śrīvidyā.
A few contemporary tantric teachers use Bāla Kālī imagery to guide:
shadow integration
inner child + śakti energy healing
trust, surrender, and fearlessness practices
| Bāla Tripura Sundarī | Bāla Kālī |
|---|---|
| Soft beauty | Soft darkness |
| Knowledge, clarity | Fearlessness, primal energy |
| Child of light | Child of shadow/ecstatic void |
| Initiates refinement | Initiates raw courage |
| Gentle unfolding | Energetic cleansing |
People who resonate with both Lalitā and Kālī sometimes feel drawn to both Bāla forms as complementary.
Because she provides:
A non-threatening entry into the Kālī-tattva
A way to work with:
fear
anxiety
childhood trauma
power imbalances
A sense of being held while doing shadow work
A playful, intimate form of fierce Shakti
A way to meet Kālī without being overwhelmed
She bridges the gap between:
the terrifying Mahākālī
the tender Mother
How a simple, safe Bāla Kālī practice might look
Whether this bhāva fits your temperament
How Bāla Kālī relates to shraddhā and grounding
How Bāla Kālī compares with Bāla Tripura Sundarī for a wandering mind
Just let me know.
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