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Yugantham 2012 -

Does anyone else feel like 2012 was just yesterday? Cleaning out my hard drive and stumbled upon these from Yugantham 2012 .

The hype leading up to December 2012 was fueled by a fundamental misunderstanding of "endings." In the linear Western narrative, an end is a full stop—oblivion. Therefore, the world braced for physical annihilation. The term Yugantham , however, does not necessarily imply total annihilation. It signifies a transition, a cusp where the old order collapses under the weight of its own contradictions, making way for a new order to emerge. yugantham 2012

While the West looked for a cinematic destruction—meteors, floods, and the crumbling of skyscrapers as depicted in Roland Emmerich’s blockbuster film 2012 —the Eastern perspective on Yugantham offers a far more subtle, yet profound, interpretation. It raises the question: Did the world end in 2012, or did the world as we knew it simply cease to exist? Does anyone else feel like 2012 was just yesterday

The lesson of Yugantham is not about fear; it is about impermanence. The year 2012 served as a global meditation on mortality and the fragility of civilization. It forced humanity to look up from its mundane routine and confront the vastness of time—cycles spanning thousands of years, civilizations rising and falling like tides. Therefore, the world braced for physical annihilation

: The film depicts the destruction of major world landmarks, including the Vatican, the White House, and the Himalayas.