By Pt. Amitabh Sharma
Maa Skandamata’s Power of Silence and Its Impact During War

War has its own nature. It begins in noise, grows through fury and moves toward destruction. When the decisive time came in the conflict between the gods and the demons, unrest filled every direction. The shine of weapons, the sound of war conches, the roar of armies and the preparation for attack had made the atmosphere heavy. Everyone expected that the struggle would now reach its highest point. Yet at that very moment, something happened that suddenly interrupted this entire movement.
Maa Skandamata was present near the battlefield. She was seated upon a lotus, completely calm and completely steady. There was no tension on her face, no aggression, as though she were seeing a deeper truth beyond the entire conflict. This silence was not ordinary silence. It was a presence that began to influence the entire atmosphere.
As her presence deepened, the pace of war itself began to slow. The soldiers who had been ready for attack only moments earlier began to hesitate. A strange stillness started descending within them. They could not understand what was happening but they could not deny its effect either.
When a force appears in fierce intensity, its effect becomes immediately visible. People either fear it, resist it or recognize it. But when a force appears as stillness, its influence is subtler and often far deeper. The silence of Maa Skandamata had become the greatest power at that moment.
She was seated upon a lotus. The lotus has a profound spiritual meaning. It remains untouched even while growing in mud. Water surrounds it, yet cannot weigh it down. In the same way, Maa Skandamata sitting upon the lotus showed that she was in the midst of conflict, yet not bound by it. She was present at the center of that battlefield, yet the battlefield had not entered her inner being. That is the condition in which peace ceases to be merely an emotion and becomes a form of conscious power.
As her presence grew deeper, a subtle change began to appear in the movement of war. Soldiers who had just been ready to charge started pausing. This pause did not come from any order. No one had commanded them to stop. Yet an unfamiliar steadiness was beginning to descend within them.
This is one of the deepest dimensions of war and it is not easily understood by ordinary perception. When inner silence begins to arise in the midst of external noise, a person begins to witness his own agitation. That is what was happening to the soldiers. They began to feel their own fear, excitement, restlessness and impulse. Because of this, their movement started changing. This was not defeat. It was the first subtle transformation in the direction of battle.
The gods were the first to feel this change within themselves. The anxiety that had gripped them began to lessen. Their vision grew clearer. Their thoughts became more composed. For the first time, they experienced that war is not merely an outer conflict. If the inner mind is scattered, outer force cannot endure for long.
The silence of Maa Skandamata gave the gods the realization that balance is essential for victory. Their confidence began to return but this was not the confidence of excitement. It was the confidence born of deeper understanding. They were no longer preparing only to fight. They were preparing to fight in the right direction and at the right moment.
For the demons, the situation became even more strange. They wanted to attack, to advance, to display their strength but something inside them began to weaken. Their energy started scattering. Questions arose within their minds. Was this truly the right moment. Was this truly the right direction. Was the stillness before them really weakness or the sign of something greater.
This doubt became their greatest difficulty. In war, even before the external enemy, inner doubt can destroy strength. The demons still looked powerful from outside, yet their confidence no longer remained whole. They became trapped between the urge to attack and the instability growing within them.
Yes and this is the most extraordinary dimension of the story. Maa Skandamata did not raise a weapon, did not make a declaration and did not challenge anyone directly. Yet her presence itself changed the atmosphere. Her silence became her message. It was the message of balance, patience and a power that can transform everything without confrontation.
The deepest secret of war is that not every change comes through weapons. Some changes come through consciousness. Some arise simply because a great force remains completely balanced in the center of crisis. Maa Skandamata upheld precisely that balance. This is why, even without open conflict, the condition of both sides began to change.
The role of Lord Kartikeya is especially important here because he was the commander of the divine army. He fully understood the intensity of war and had the strength to take fierce decisions when required. Yet when he felt the silent presence of his mother, a profound balance also awakened within him. The fire of war still remained in him but it was no longer blind. It began to move with discernment.
He understood that attacking at every moment is not the same as wisdom. At times, waiting for the right moment is itself a form of great strength. This understanding was not merely strategic. It was born from inner clarity. The silence of Maa Skandamata awakened that clarity within him. His decisions became more balanced, more timely and more effective. That is why it can be said that her silence was not only present on the battlefield, it was also working through the decisions of Kartikeya.
This story is not limited to a divine war. It is equally a truth about human life. In life too, there are many moments when immediate reaction feels easy but not right. There are moments when we need not force but clarity, not speed but patience, not aggression but balance. If the mind is disturbed, decisions become confused. If the mind is still, the path begins to reveal itself.
That is exactly what Maa Skandamata’s form teaches. The greatest guidance does not always come through words. At times it comes as a silent peace that steadies us from within. From that steadiness, the right thought arises. Through that, the right timing becomes visible. And from that, the decision is born that later becomes the cause of victory.
Many people mistake silence for weakness. They believe that one who does not react immediately, speak loudly or strike quickly must be powerless. But from the divine perspective, silence can often be the highest form of force. Because in silence, energy is not wasted. It is gathered, protected and transformed into right action at the right moment.
Maa Skandamata revealed exactly this. Her silence was not emptiness. It contained direction, compassion and profound balance. It became a force that reshaped the atmosphere without collision. That is why this episode is not only a story of war but also a living example of the power of silence.
In the end, it became clear that the silence of Maa Skandamata was not ordinary. It was a divine force that influenced the entire war from within. The gods received balance, Kartikeya received clarity and the demons were overcome by doubt. Without any visible use of weapons, the current of battle began to change. That was her greatest power.
This story compels us to reflect on whether we too recognize the power of silence in our own lives. Do we seek the solution to every problem only in struggle or do we sometimes turn toward peace as well. Maa Skandamata teaches that when inner steadiness descends, our entire presence changes. And when presence changes, circumstances too begin to transform on their own.
Why was the silence of Maa Skandamata so powerful in war
Because her silence was not ordinary. It was the power of balanced consciousness affecting both sides from within.
What effect did her silence have on the gods
Their fear reduced, their thoughts became clearer and their confidence regained stability.
What did the demons experience
They began to feel doubt, their aggression weakened and their confidence started to tremble.
Were the decisions of Lord Kartikeya also influenced by this
Yes. He gained greater clarity and patience, which allowed him to make more balanced decisions.
What is the main message of this story
True power does not exist only in noise and aggression. Silence, peace and inner balance can create the greatest transformation.
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