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Monday Is Not a Fast for Shiva, but a Discipline of the Soul

by On The Dot
December 22, 2025
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Why Do We Clap Three Times in Front of the Shivlinga?

Monday worship of Lord Shiva is often reduced to ritual—fasting, offering water, bilva leaves, incense, and lamps. Yet to confine Shiva to ritual alone is to misunderstand his essence. Shiva is not bound by a day, a method, or a vow. Monday, in its truest sense, is not about abstaining from food; it is about cultivating inner discipline.

Shiva’s form stands beyond external display. He is the ascetic absorbed in meditation on Mount Kailash, and at the same time the cosmic force dancing as Mahakal in the heart of existence. His life teaches that restraint and freedom are not opposites but complements. Monday reminds us of this balance—control without suppression, engagement without attachment.

The word “Som” links Monday to the moon. In Indian philosophy, the moon represents the mind, and Shiva is Chandrashekhar—the one who bears the moon. This symbolism is profound. Shiva does not destroy the mind; he holds it, regulates it, and accepts it in both its fullness and emptiness. Thus, the discipline of Monday is essentially the discipline of the mind. Fasting is not merely the denial of food, but a conscious pause from excess—of desire, anger, restlessness, and impulse.

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Silence occupies a central place in Shiva worship. Shiva himself is silent—still, composed, meditative. The true essence of Monday lies in creating space away from inner noise. When the mind stops speaking, awareness begins to listen. That silence becomes the highest form of prayer.

In an age where religion is often reduced to spectacle and comparison, Monday serves as a reminder that Shiva seeks understanding, not exhibition. He is simple, but not naive; compassionate, yet deeply aware. Performing a fast is easy, but embodying restraint, humility, and balance is far more demanding.

Monday invites self-examination. It asks whether we exercise the same control over our anger, ego, and cravings as we do over our meals. If not, the vow remains incomplete.

The vow of Shiva is, ultimately, a vow of the soul—a discipline where one does not merely restrain oneself, but learns to understand oneself. That is the true observance of Monday, and that is the essence of Shiva.

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