Kali Yuga · 28th Maha-yuga · 7th Manvantara (Vaivasvata)

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Kali Yuga

The age of the quarrel and conflict — the shortest, darkest yuga. It began at the traditional date of Krishna's departure, 3102 BCE, and runs 432,000 years.

Complete
Years remaining
Length
432,000 yrs

The Maha-yuga

Four yugas in descending length — the 4 : 3 : 2 : 1 ratio of a declining age. We are in the 28th maha-yuga of this manvantara, deep in its final quarter (Kali).

Through the 28th maha-yuga
One maha-yuga
4,320,000 yrs

The Manvantara

An age of one Manu = 71 maha-yugas = 306.72 million years. Fourteen Manus rule in turn across a single day of Brahmā. We live under the 7th, Vaivasvata.

    Six are done. We are in the seventh. Seven more before this day of Brahmā ends. through Vaivasvata's reign.

    The Day of Brahmā

    All fourteen Manus together are one day of Brahmā — a Kalpa4.32 billion years. We sit near its middle.

    Day complete

    Naimittika Pralaya — the partial dissolution

    When this day ends, the lower worlds flood and burn. Time remaining:

    A striking convergence

    Modern stellar astrophysics: the Sun swells to a red giant and renders Earth uninhabitable in ~1–5 billion years (oceans boil ~1 Gyr; Earth engulfed ~5 Gyr). The Puranic next dissolution — ~2.35 billion years — falls inside that window.

    This is arithmetic on the scriptural model set beside an independently measured figure. The agreement is striking; it is not offered as proof.

    Night of Brahmā

    After the day, 4.32 billion years of darkness. The three highest worlds endure; everything up through the heavens is withdrawn.

    The Life of Brahmā

    The outermost shell of time: 311,040,000,000,000 years — one hundred years of Brahmā. He is about halfway through.

    Brahmā's life complete
    To Mahāpralaya (total dissolution)

    At his death, everything returns — element folding into subtler element:

      Then: innumerable universes drift in the Causal Ocean like bubbles, Mahā-Viṣṇu breathing. One breath = one life of Brahmā. Ours is a single bubble among countless.

      Everything here ticks

      Only the witness of all this has no expiry. Everything you just scrolled through dissolves. The one watching does not.

      — the idea of na jāyate mriyate vā, Bhagavad Gītā 2.20: the soul is never born and never dies.