By Pt. Sanjeev Sharma
The Secret of Maa Skandamata’s Calm Presence and the Path of Victory

The result of a war is usually seen at the end, when the struggle is over, the dust settles and the victor becomes clear. Yet not every war is decided only by the final strike. Some battles begin changing direction much earlier, when the outer conflict has not even fully unfolded. In the great war between the gods and the demons, such a moment also arrived. This moment was not marked by a roar, a celestial weapon or a fierce attack. It was marked by the calm, unwavering and compassionate presence of Maa Skandamata, whose silence began shaping the path of victory from within.
At that time Maa Skandamata was seated upon a lotus. Her face carried the same profound peace that is untouched by circumstance. She seemed free from hurry, anxiety or agitation, as though she already knew what lay ahead. This was not merely the peaceful form of a goddess. It was a sign that could not be understood by outer sight alone. Her peace was a living force and that very force began to alter the atmosphere of the battlefield from within.
Every battle operates on two levels at once. One is the outer level, where armies are seen, weapons are used and formations take shape. The other is the inner level, where fear, clarity, balance, impulse and decision are at work. Maa Skandamata’s influence was active on this second level. She did not appear to intervene outwardly in the war, yet she touched the very foundation upon which the direction of the battle depended. That is why her silent presence was not merely a comfort. It was a decisive presence.
Her lotus seat deepens this truth. The lotus remains untouched even while living in mud. In the same way, Maa Skandamata was close to war, yet the fever of war could not enter her. Her stillness itself became a message that the one who is inwardly stable is the one who can shape even the fiercest outer conflict.
When the gods beheld this form of Maa Skandamata, a new confidence began to arise within them. They were no longer merely preparing for war. They were beginning to feel that a force stood with them that already understood the deeper movement of events. This experience was subtle, yet its effect was immense. Their fear began to recede. Disorder in thought started to settle. They began to think with greater clarity.
Earlier their preparation had energy but it also had anxiety. Now that same preparation began filling with balance. They started moving without panic. They began to understand that every moment does not demand attack. There are moments when patience itself becomes strategy. This transformation did not come through formal counsel, speech or command. It arose through the inner steadiness that Maa Skandamata’s presence awakened in them.
From the outer view, perhaps not, because they still possessed strength, numbers and confidence in their might. But from the inner view, yes. The first seed of their defeat had already been planted. The silent presence of Maa Skandamata awakened doubt within them. There was no visible challenge before them, yet their confidence could no longer remain completely whole.
This made the situation even more disturbing for them. If fierce aggression had stood before them, they could have responded according to their own nature. But what stood before them was a peace they could not understand. That unreadable force began troubling them inwardly. Their thoughts started to scatter. Plans began to be questioned. Decisions lost firmness. This was not yet outer defeat but it was already inner disintegration and that is where every true defeat begins.
When an army is not fully clear in its own purpose, even its external strikes become weaker. That is exactly what happened to the demons. Many times they moved toward attack, yet at some subtle level they hesitated. At times the moment did not seem right to them. At times they doubted their own plan. At times they felt uneasily that the force before them was not ordinary. Such doubt was no small matter. In war, doubt can be more dangerous than the enemy itself.
Maa Skandamata raised no weapon, yet she began weakening the war capacity of the demons from within. The more unstable their minds became, the less effective their outer power remained. This is the stage at which it becomes fair to say that the path of victory had already begun to be determined inwardly.
When the gods observed that unrest was increasing within the demons, they stopped rushing blindly. This is a deeply significant part of the story. Had they remained caught in their earlier impulse and attacked at every moment, they might have failed to understand the subtle advantage arising before them. But now their thinking had changed. Through Maa Skandamata’s presence, they had received patience and that patience gave them the capacity to recognize the right moment.
They understood that victory is not achieved only through striking but also through waiting. They began reading the situation instead of merely chasing the outcome. This is why their decisions became more mature. They did not waste their force. They waited for the right moment and that waiting later became one of their greatest strengths.
This is the deepest meaning of the story. True victory is first decided within and only later revealed outside. If the mind is steady, vision is clear, purpose is rooted in dharma and decisions are made at the right time, then outward victory becomes only a matter of time. This is exactly what Maa Skandamata demonstrated. She did not win the war from outside first. She first established the state of victory within the gods.
In the same way, the state of defeat began to arise within the demons. Outwardly they were still fighting but inwardly their center had already weakened. That is why when the war finally ended, it became clear that the victory had begun taking form much earlier, from the very moment the silent presence of Maa Skandamata had begun influencing the consciousness of both sides in different ways.
This story is not only a description of a mythic war. It also reveals a deep truth of human life. We often connect results only to the final event. Yet in reality many outcomes begin forming much earlier, when our mind, thought, patience and inner balance are taking shape. If there is instability within, even outer achievements will not endure. If there is peace within, even difficult circumstances begin slowly to change direction.
Maa Skandamata teaches that every great victory requires inner preparation first. Inner balance, clarity and patience are the ground in which outer success takes root. The meaning of her silence is precisely this. Noise is not always necessary. At times silence itself becomes the most decisive force.
She teaches that true power does not always lie in striking. Many times it lies in presence. It lies in how steady we can remain amidst circumstance. It lies in whether we can preserve clarity in times of fear. It also lies in whether we possess the patience to wait for the right moment.
The form of Maa Skandamata in this episode teaches that victory is not an event of one moment. It is the fruit of many subtle moments in which the mind was steadied, impulse was restrained, doubt was understood and action was taken according to right timing. This is why this episode is not only praise of the goddess. It is also a scripture of inner victory.
Did Maa Skandamata determine the direction of victory even before the war was fought
Yes. Her calm and steady presence gave clarity to the gods and doubt to the demons, changing the direction of the battle from within.
What was the greatest change within the gods
Their fear reduced, patience increased and their decisions became more balanced and timely.
How did the defeat of the demons begin
Cracks appeared in their confidence. Doubt grew and they began questioning their own plans and decisions.
Is patience shown here as a form of power
Yes. Patience appears here not merely as waiting but as awakened strength that recognizes the right moment.
What is the main teaching of this episode
True victory is first attained within. When the mind is steady and clear, outer success becomes only a matter of time.
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