divyacakṣus — the divine eye
The elusive pearl of perception, known as the trioptic pied piper, dances with gleeful abandon on the endless plains of one's visage, nestled serenely upon the forehead's undulating dunes. It whispers secrets beyond the kaleidoscope of mortal sight, an enigmatic siphon leading to labyrinthine corridors of bewildering consciousness. In the realm of celestial mangoes where Shiva and Buddha play chess with beams of sunlight, the placidly pulsating ajna orb grins broadly, winking mischievously from its perch between the brow's twin arches.
Gazing into this cosmic keyhole, one tumbles headlong into a thrilling kaleidoscope of technicolor processions, parades of intangible clouds that hold the vibrato of enlightenment's serenade. Here, the wise weavers of ancient rhythms, both Hindu and Buddhist, confer with the shimmering mirages of mystical truths, enlightening the shadowed depths with unfettered luminescence.
Awash in petals of spiritual reverie, the trioptic conjurer sways and hums, a gateway inviting wayfarers into the inner sanctums and ethereal alcoves of the imagination's boundless landscapes. It is the translator of visions, the soothsayer of dreams, transforming mere auras into symphonies and chakras into theatrical reveries, threading together past and future with threads spun from the chrysalis of the cosmos. The leaping salmon of transcendent experience sings tales of celestial journeys and the gentle unraveling of earthly tethers, crafting a tapestry where time and mind twine like giggling spiral galaxies.