I don't know doston I think i am going to get the chappals thrown on me but i just ilttle bit disagree (okay - ready for chappals!😆) I know the CV's of this show do keep coming back again and again (and again!!😕) to theme of humanity, manushya, as present even in the activities of the divine ones. They do seem to love this theme and sometimes it irritates as we humans know in our souls that these beings are in fact not human and would not act like us - that is why we draw teaching from them. But zara soch lo...they have to show something here. Shiv has been plunged into the deepest well of grief - he knew pehle ki this marriage was bad idea. He tried to explain to everyone. But he went ahead and laid himself open to rejoining his broken self, to feeling whole again. He loved Sati in spite of knowing she was doomed. Do gods have feeling like ours? No...not according to scripture. But this problem comes up again and again and again as people who study scripture try to understand the leelas. Why do the tears stream from Ram's face when Sita is abducted? Why does Krishna love Radha? Why does Shiv grieve for Sati when even they all know that it is all maya?
If one accepts that there is some aim behind the behavior of the divine, then one can draw some learning from it all.
Vaise, Mohit has portrayed the emotion of grief in so believable way. Imagine if we cannot bear to see Shiv's pain so much so that some have stopped watching at all, imagine how much pain there might really have been. But don't worry doston...he will enter his deep meditation and the world will turn normally again. Maybe it is good sometimes we feel compassion for god as he has so much for us too!😊
Edited by bhakti2 - 13 years ago