Devotional & Philosophical Stories · The Esoteric & Philosophical (Tattva)

The Goad and the Noose

← Back to Devotional & Philosophical Stories An 18th-century North Indian ceremonial elephant goad (ankusha) displayed in a museum collection. Photo: Ann1967 / Wikimedia Commons (CC BY 3.0)

Among the objects most consistently placed in Shree Ganesh's hands across his many forms are two small but potent tools: the Ankusha, an elephant driver's goad, and the Pasha, a noose or lasso. Together they describe, in a single gesture, the entire discipline of the spiritual path.

The Goad That Drives Forward

The Ankusha is the tool used to direct a working elephant — not to injure it, but to guide its enormous strength toward a purpose. In Shree Ganesh's hand, it represents the gentle but firm prompting that moves a devotee past laziness, fear, or hesitation, driving effort toward the good.

The Noose That Holds Back

The Pasha performs the opposite function: it restrains. Where the goad pushes what is sluggish forward, the noose pulls back what runs wild — desire, anger, attachment, and the many impulses that scatter the mind. Held together, the two implements show a complete philosophy of self-mastery: neither pure restraint nor pure exertion alone, but the balance of both applied with wisdom.

What Devotees Seek

Devotees striving to break a bad habit while also building the discipline for a new one often meditate on these two objects together, asking Shree Ganesh for the same balanced hand that can push and pull exactly where each is needed.