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30+ Amazing Goddess Saraswati Tattoos with Meanings and Ideas

Saraswati is a Hindu goddess who is concerned with education, creativity, and music. Saraswati gets its name from the Sanskrit word “Saras,” which means “what is watery.” Goddess Saraswati is recognized for rescuing requests from chaos and for having a calm and focused personality. Goddess Sarawati, unlike other goddesses, chooses not to have children. She talks about oddities, individuality, and rebellious ideas through verse, prose, and music. Goddess Saraswati remains a champion of human expression and intellectual thoroughness. Goddess Saraswati is known as the inventor of Sanskrit and a patron of the arts and sciences. Brahma is regarded as the creator of the universe. He also created Goddess Saraswati, whose knowledge and ingenuity anticipated to pervade his various appearances. Goddess Saraswati is seen as his little girl and intellectual offspring in this way.

Goddess Saraswati has four arms and is depicted carrying a veena which serves as a reminder of her endowment of music to humanity, sacred scriptures (the Vedas), and a Kamandalu (an oblong water pot). She’s dressed in a white sari (which represents immaculateness). She might have a bow on her temple, be standing on a lotus blossom, and be accompanied by a swan, both of which are symbols of intellect. Saraswati is frequently associated with the color white, which connotes the purity of pure Knowledge. In any case, she is also associated with yellow, the color of the mustard plant’s blossoms, which bloom at the time of her celebration in the spring. Saraswati, unlike the goddess Lakshmi, isn’t lavishly adorned with gems, gold, and heavy silks, but is dressed modestly may be to reflect her preference for knowledge above mundane material pursuits.

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Goddess Saraswati’s feet are situated close to the white swan. The sacred swan is claimed to have a delicate beak that allows it to tell the difference between milk and water. In this way, the swan symbolizes the contrast between the sublime and the horrible, or the eternal and the ephemeral. Goddess Saraswati is also known as Hamsa-Vahini, which means “she who has a swan as her vehicle” because of her affinity with the swan. Although Goddess Saraswati rides a swan rather than a peacock, a peacock is represented in most of her picture iconographies. As a celebration of arts and dance, the peacock represents beauty, dance, arts, and various colors of tremendous wisdom.

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