The Age of the Dividing Veil: The Dvapara Yuga and the World at the Threshold

The Dvapara Yuga is the age of the dividing veil โ€” the third great movement in the Vedic cosmological symphony, in which dharma stands on only two of its original legs, the Divine withdraws behind the curtain of paradox and play, and the human soul encounters for the first time the full, aching depth of sacred longing. Drawing on the Puranic vision of a world at moral twilight, the inexhaustible mystery of Krishna as the avatar perfectly calibrated to an age of complexity, the Mahabharata as the soul-map of a civilization at the knife-edge between remembering and forgetting, and the resonant echoes of Hesiod, Plotinus, Rumi, and modern consciousness research, this essay completes the trilogy of the Yugas yet to come โ€” and in doing so, asks the question every sincere seeker must eventually face: what does it mean to love the Divine not because it is obvious, but precisely because it is not?