Kali Amavasya
- Hashtag Kalakar
- Nov 12, 2025
- 2 min read
By Jivika Vikamshi
The night the moon disappears. The night every shadow rises. The night you meet not the Devi in the idol, but the one who lives in your spine. The one who holds your rage, your grief, your unbearable love, your wild knowing.
That night, I didn’t do a single ritual. But I cried like something in me was being exorcised. And maybe it was. Because Kali maa doesn’t take what you’re willing to offer. She takes what you cling to. And I clung to too much.
Love.
Identity.
The illusion that I could understand divinity without being destroyed by it.
So she took it all. And in that fire, I met myself. Not the curated self. Not the seeker. Not the one with answers. But the one who has been walking barefoot through madness, grief, heartbreak, longing and still says “Shivoham.”
Still calls her Maa.
Ma doesn’t walk in gently. She doesn’t knock. She storms in.
And when she does, she doesn’t say, “Jivu, are you ready?” She screams , “This version of you? It’s done, Chalo get over it. Enough is enough. Close the chapter. Don’t you dare reopen it. Trust me. That’s it.“
You might think you’re being destroyed. You’re not. She’s just refusing to let you continue in a form that cannot hold what you prayed for.
Because you did pray.
You asked for the truth.
You asked for awakening.
You asked for your Shiv.
And her reply wasn’t a warm embrace.
It was a fire.
A blade.
A silence so loud, it made your bones tremble.
You thought she was leaving you in the dark.
But Kali maa doesn’t abandon. She strips.
She removes the noise so you can finally hear.
She removes the scaffolding so you can build from your own spine.
She takes you to the edge and when you scream, “I have nothing left,”
She says,
“Good. Now we begin.”
Kali maa is not the goddess of endings.
She is the goddess of what begins after.
And what begins after is not the same you who started.
It’s the one who walked through death and didn’t flinch.
The one who was cut open and still bowed.
The one who lost everything and still whispered, “Ma.”
And when She takes, She’s not asking for your obedience. She’s inviting your becoming.
This is re-alignment. This is not punishment but preparation.
Because the you that’s coming,
cannot be built on fear.
cannot be built on illusion.
cannot carry stories that were never yours.
So she takes the version of you that begged, that doubted, that settled.
And what you’re left with… is truth.
That's Tapasya.
That’s the unshakable Bhakti.
That’s why she's called Maa even when it hurts.
Well, Shravan didn’t make me more spiritual.
It made me more empty.
And that emptiness… is Her lap.
By Jivika Vikamshi

I got goosebumps reading, and it reminded me of my Kali Maa Sadhna. This piece reflects the raw, fierce, and transformative power of the divine, from the divine herself. 🙏
Reading this itself is a spiritual experience and spiritual awakening, the intention and the intensity of the writer can be seen in this piece , truely beautiful.
Reading this piece itself is a spiritual experience or spiritual awakening, words used are just perfect and meaningful, it shows , what the writer wants to say and where she’s coming from . Truly beautiful .
May Maa be by your side... always..
This piece is nothing short of breathtaking. It captures the raw, unflinching truth of spiritual surrender in a way that hits the soul. Reading it felt like seeing my own journey mirrored back, the emptiness, the stripping away, the fire that isn’t punishment but preparation. Every line resonates with the unbearable beauty of meeting yourself in the crucible of devotion, the trembling, the surrender, the quiet emergence of truth. It doesn’t just describe an experience of the divine; it makes you feel it, deep in your bones. Truly a profound, transformative read.