Reading the Bilobed Leaf: Symbolism of Kovidar's Form
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Mythology

Reading the Bilobed Leaf: Symbolism of Kovidar's Form

The twin-lobed leaf of Kovidar has been read as footprint, as pair, as dharma balanced with karma. A meditation.

5 min read··
SymbolismLeafMeditationDharma

A leaf cleft in two

Hold a Kovidar leaf up to the light. Two lobes, one stem. A single leaf that has become, at its tip, an almost-pair. Folk imagination in North India calls it the camel's footprint. Sanskrit poets called it yugma — the twinned.

What it has meant

  • Dharma & karma — two halves of a single principle
  • Purusha & prakriti — consciousness and matter joined
  • Ram & Sita — the beloved pair remembered in a single leaf
  • The waking and dreaming minds — unified by a still root

To sit beneath a Kovidar, then, is to sit beneath a botanical koan. The tree asks: what in you is truly two, and what in you is one?


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