By Aparna Patni
Secret of Chandraghanta’s Bell: Time, Consciousness, and Divine Rhythm

Among the many elements of Maa Chandraghanta’s form, her bell is considered one of the most striking and unusual. Many people see it only as a symbol, a weapon or a source of divine sound, yet some ancient narrative hints suggest something far deeper. It is said that her bell did not merely produce sound. It could also influence the very experience of time.
At first, this may sound impossible. How could anyone affect time. Yet when the story is understood more deeply, it no longer remains mere imagination. During the struggle between the gods and the asuras, the battle was not only about force. It was also about timing, movement, response and the rhythm of unfolding events. The side that could align with the right movement of time would gain the greater advantage.
Maa Chandraghanta understood this hidden principle. She realized that the war could not be won through weapons alone. Something deeper, something that influences every action and every outcome, had to be touched and that was time as experienced through consciousness. This is the point where the real meaning of her bell begins to emerge.
The answer becomes clear only when we understand that time here does not merely mean the movement of a clock. In divine narratives, time often points to the pace of events, the speed of decision, the flow of awareness and the movement of energy. When the story says that Maa Chandraghanta’s bell could affect time, it does not mean that the Sun stopped or the universe froze. It means that under the influence of her bell, the experience of movement, reaction and battle rhythm began to change.
So her bell does not destroy time. It alters the experience of time. That is why the asuras began to feel as though everything was slowing down around them. Their reactions became delayed, their decisions became unclear and the battle slipped out of their grip. This is not the stopping of time in a crude sense. It is the transformation of conscious rhythm and through that, the transformation of time as lived and experienced.
In any battle, strength alone does not decide victory. Right timing, right movement and right response are often more important than raw force. One delayed moment can change everything. One timely decision can overcome a stronger enemy. That is why battle is never only a clash of weapons. It is also a struggle over rhythm and timing.
The power of the asuras was not confined to physical aggression. They were fast, forceful and sharply reactive. This was one of their greatest advantages. If their rhythm could be broken, if their decision making flow could be disturbed, then their force would begin to weaken. Maa Chandraghanta understood this secret. She knew that to alter the outcome of war, she would have to alter the tempo of events and that is what her bell appears to do.
The story suggests that when her bell sounded, it was not simply a loud tone. It was a deep resonance, a widening wave and a divine presence that began changing the atmosphere itself. For a few moments, everything seemed to slow. The movements of the asuras became less sharp, their ability to make decisions weakened and their reactions grew delayed.
What is important is that this change happened more inwardly than outwardly. The sound did not attack their bodies. It touched their mind, attention and energetic balance. When the mind becomes scattered, time itself begins to feel different. A clear mind experiences time as sufficient. A disturbed mind feels time slipping away. Maa Chandraghanta’s bell pushed the asuras into just such a state of confusion. It felt to them as if time itself had turned against them.
It would be incomplete to say that it was only illusion. A more accurate understanding is that her bell changed their state of consciousness and once consciousness changed, the experience of time changed as well. When a being is afraid, time may feel too fast or too slow. When the mind is steady, the same time feels ordered. When the mind is full of confusion, even a single moment can become heavy.
This is what happened to the asuras. Their balance was shaken. Their speed no longer served them. Their reactions became mistimed. So it is not enough to call this mere illusion. It is better understood as a divine alteration in conscious rhythm, through which time seemed to shift.
The gods witnessed that the flow of the battle had suddenly altered. The asuras who had until then appeared aggressive and swift now seemed uncertain and slowed. Their momentum had broken. Their capacity to dominate was no longer the same. This was no ordinary event. The gods understood that something deeper than physical strength was now at work.
For them, the bell of Maa Chandraghanta ceased to be merely sound. It became the symbol of time balance, battle rhythm and divine intervention. They recognized that before striking on the visible battlefield, the Goddess had already touched the hidden level from which the movement of the battle itself was being guided.
No and this is one of the deepest aspects of the symbol. The bell of Maa Chandraghanta was not only an instrument of war. It was also a sign of awakening. When a bell rings, it does more than create sound. It awakens sleeping awareness, gathers the scattered mind and establishes a new rhythm in the surrounding field. That is why her bell cannot be reduced to a war signal alone.
For the asuras it became fear but for the gods and seekers it was assurance and awakened clarity. This shows that the effect of her bell was layered. It was disturbance for adharma and gathering for dharma. It was confusion for the dark and clarity for the awakened.
This story explains beautifully that time is not only an outer measure. It is deeply connected with the state of awareness. When the mind is calm, time feels balanced. When the mind is frightened, time may feel too fast or too slow. When one is deeply absorbed, hours can pass like moments. When one is troubled, even a moment can feel long and heavy.
For this reason, it may be said that Maa Chandraghanta’s bell affected time not by physically stopping it but by stabilizing or destabilizing consciousness. One who is inwardly clear finds time supportive. One who is inwardly disturbed finds time hostile. Her bell worked precisely at this inner point.
In life, most people understand time only through clocks, schedules, deadlines and delay. Yet the lived experience of time is deeply influenced by our inner state. When a person is clear, steady and balanced, the same day feels more spacious and usable. But when the mind is restless, afraid or confused, time always feels too little.
Maa Chandraghanta’s story teaches that if we become inwardly steady, our relationship with time also changes. Then we stop living reactively and begin living consciously. Then decisions are not rushed. Then circumstances do not drive us blindly. Instead, we meet them with clarity. This is the practical wisdom hidden in her bell.
Yes, perhaps more than ever. Today people have great concern for time management, yet little concern for consciousness management. They divide their hours but they do not stabilize their mind. They organize their day but often do not center their inner rhythm. That is why even with many outer tools, they still feel rushed and unsettled. The forgotten secret of Maa Chandraghanta’s bell reminds us that understanding time is not only about minutes and hours. It is about understanding the rhythm of consciousness.
If the inner movement is disturbed, even the best outer planning may fail. If the inner center is steady, difficult time can also be used wisely. That is why this story is not only a tale of divine power. It is also a profound teaching about how life itself should be lived.
In the end, it becomes clear that Maa Chandraghanta’s bell was not merely a weapon or a decorative symbol. It was a divine medium through which the state of consciousness, the rhythm of battle and the experience of time could all be transformed. It does not suggest the stopping of time but the balancing of time through the balancing of awareness. That is the beauty of this forgotten secret.
Maa Chandraghanta teaches that when inner steadiness awakens, time itself begins to feel supportive. When confusion dominates within, time turns into pressure. therefore the real instrument is not outside but within. And perhaps this is the greatest teaching hidden in her bell.
Did Maa Chandraghanta’s bell truly control time
The story suggests that her bell did not stop outer time but influenced the speed of consciousness and the experience of unfolding events.
Why did the asuras feel that time had turned against them
Because the bell disturbed their mind, weakened their decision making and slowed their response.
How did the gods recognize this power
They saw the rhythm of battle change and understood that the Goddess had intervened on a subtle level.
What is the spiritual meaning of this story
It teaches that time and consciousness are deeply linked and when awareness becomes steady, time also feels more balanced.
How is this episode useful in life
It teaches that one must not only manage time outwardly but also steady the inner rhythm from which the experience of time arises.
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