Bhishma

Bhishma then explained that he had been serving the Kauravas and living on their bounty. He said, "As a result of consuming the food received from such ignoble and vicious persons, my blood became polluted and all the pure thoughts in me were thereby suppressed. Now that Arjuna’s arrows have drained away all my impure blood from me, the Dharma that was deep inside me is gushing forth and is inducing me to communicate it to your husbands". From this episode, students must realise the crucial role food plays in determining one’s thoughts, words and actions.

Bhishma adored Krishna even when He was rushing towards him with His Sudarshana Chakra. His sense of Sharanagathi (Total surrender to Divinity) did not desert him at the point of death at the hands of the very person whom he revered as God. "Kill me or save me, I shall not falter in my loyalty", he said. The noble heroic warrior Bhishma waited for 56 days on the bed of arrows in the battle field so that he could give up his life in Uttarayana.

When you crave for the thought of the Lord and the company of the Godly, then you are in Uttarayana.

Whatever the trouble, however great the travail, persist and win the same by means of Smarana, (remembrance). Remember Bhishma! Though prostrate on a bed of arrows he bore the pain patiently, awaiting the dawn of the auspicious moment; he never called out to God in his agony, asking Him to put an end to his sufferings. "I shall bear everything, whatever the pain, however long the agony. I shall be silent until the moment comes. Take me when it dawns" he said, for Bhishma was the chief among the sant bhaktas (saints and devotees).

Bhishma took a vow of life-long celibacy to enable his father to marry the woman whom he desired, whose father insisted that the son born to her should be the heir to the throne. Bhishma not only renounced his title to the throne but also took the vow of celibacy to ensure that he would leave no progeny to claim the right. After he fell in the battle he lay on a bed of arrows for 56 days for the auspicious moment of the northward motion of the sun to give up his life. He had such will power that he could bear any amount of personal suffering. He spent his last days imparting the highest wisdom to the Pandavas.