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Rainbow: an arc, bow, part of a circle; arch, vault of colored light in the sky caused by refraction (re-fractaling) of the sun's (the sol's, the soul's) rays by rain water drops
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NAMES<>MEANS (anagram?)
"BOW OF RAIN"
"RAINBOW" "RAIN" "BOW"
"RA"-"IN"-"BO"?
"ARC OF RAIN"
"RAIN ARC"
"RA"-"IN"-"ARC"?
"R-A-I-N" ? "I-N-R-A" ? "I-N-D-R-A" ? "INDRA" ?
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INDRA:
GENDER: Masculine USAGE: Indian, Hinduism
OTHER SCRIPTS: इन्द्र, इंद्र (Hindi, Sanskrit)
PRONOUNCED: IN-dra [key]
Meaning & History "possessing drops of rain"
from Sanskrit इन्दु (indu) "a drop" and र (ra) "possessing".
Indra is the name of the ancient Hindu warrior god of the sky and rain.
He is the chief god in the Hindu text the Rigveda.
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Jeweled Net of Indra
"Far away in the heavenly abode of the great god Indra, there is a wonderful net which has been hung by some cunning artificer in such a manner that it stretches out infinitely in all directions. In accordance with the extravagant tastes of deities, the artificer has hung a single glittering jewel in each "eye" of the net, and since the net itself is infinite in dimension, the jewels are infinite in number. There hang the jewels, glittering like stars in the first magnitude, a wonderful sight to behold. If we now arbitrarily select one of these jewels for inspection and look closely at it, we will discover that in its polished surface there are reflected all the other jewels in the net, infinite in number. Not only that, but each of the jewels reflected in this one jewel is also reflecting all the other jewels, so that there is an infinite reflecting process occurring"
Quoted in World as Lover World as Self by Joanna Macy
(i've glimpsed the realm described above. amazing description of an experience barely describable.)
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(Clues to the "phi" "arc" "fractal" nature of "Indra": "king of the gods" yet spiraling away from wholeness)
"The Upanishads, Hindu sacred texts, tell us that after slaying/raising the great snake, Vritra, Indra is understandably puffed up with pride. He ascends a great mountain and decides to build a palace worthy of such a great hero as himself. But the construction of the building just goes on and on. The head carpenter to the gods realizes he has signed on to an eternal contract. Clearly something must be done to whittle Indra down to size.
Upon consultation with Brahma, the god of creation, a curious plot is played out. A mysterious messenger appears at the palace door one day, and Indra proceeds to show him around the new construction. The messenger is properly impressed and remarks that this is certainly the finest palace any Indra has ever built. Indra is understandably confused. Any Indra? He thought he was the only one. The messenger from Brahma draws Indra's attention to a procession of ants walking in formation over the palace floor. "Those ants," he says, "are all former Indras!""
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(this next excerpt is loaded with strange clues and info but doesn't the "battle" with Vritra sound like an allegory for raising kundalini?)
Indra is the Vedic god of rain and thunder. He is king of the gods in the Rig Veda, ranking next to Agni. The Rig Veda also describes him as the great warrior, and leader of the Aryans, who crumbles the humble earthworks of the black, snub-nosed, "primitive," of the land, loots the treasure houses of the "godless," and "frees the rivers (a phrase taken to mean the breaking down of dams and levees). It seems that Indra was originally a clan chief who was deified and over the centuries took on attributes of gods. At the height of the Vedic period he was a violent, hard-drinking Bronze Age barbarian; later on though he dropped to the second rank of the gods, his place ironically being taken by Krishna, a gentler god.
In early Vedic history Indra was thought of as a sky god. He gained his position by (depending on the version translated) slaying or raising Vrtra, or Ahi, the serpent of drought, who swallowed the cosmic waters and lay in coils around the mountains. Indra's decisive thunderbolt split the stomach of Ahi, releasing the waters, generating life, and liberating the dawn.
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Indradhanus: Sankskrit for indra's bow or rainbow
Amitola: American Indian Sioux name meaning rainbow
Arco baleno: Italian for rainbow mean "arc of lightening" "arc of light flash"
Arc en ciel: French for rainbow meaning "arc in sky"
Arco iris: Spanish meaning rainbow arc of iris
Arc de Sant Martí: Catalan for rainbow
Ayame: Japanese name meaning iris
Веселка: Rainbow in Ukrainian
Curcubeu: Rainbow in Romanian
Duha: Czech for Rainbow
Enfys: Welsh unisex name meaning rainbow
gökkuşağı, ebemkuşağ: Turkish for rainbow
Iris: Greek rainbow goddess
Isa: Chamoru name meaning rainbow
Itzel: Variant of Mayan Ixchel, meaning rainbow lady
Ixchel: Mayan myth name of a goddess of the earth, moon, and medicine, meaning rainbow lady
Kashti: Hebrew name meaning my bow; my rainbow
Keshet: Hebrew name meaning rainbow
Munkwon: Micmac word for the rainbow
niji: Japanese for rainbow
pадуга: Russian meaning rainbow
pelangi: Indonesian meaning rainbow
tecza: Polish for Rainbow
pstrąg: Polish for Rainbow
ostadar :Basque name meaning rainbow
osumare: African Yoruba name meaning rainbow
regenboog: Dutch for rainbow
regenbogen: German for rain "regen": rain, "bogen": arc, bow, part of a circle; arch, vault
regnbue: Danish and Norwegian for rainbow "regn": rain, "bue": bow
regnbåge: Swedish for rainbow
chavatangakwunua: Hopi American Indian name meaning short rainbow
tangakwunu: Hope American Indian name meaning rainbow
szivárvány: Hungarian for rainbow
Qaws qozah: Arabic for rainbow
dziadzan: Armenian name meaning rainbow
ziazan: Armenian name meaning rainbow
upindi wa mvua: Swahili for rainbow
sateenkaari: Finnish for rainbow
ānuenue: Hawaiian for rainbow
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Wonderful research here, just saw this.
a reflection of the resistance's eye-opening instruction. thank you to all of you too.
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