2019, Black Hole-Are we Living in one??
Shiva Connection, Multiverse Dissolution, and Cosmic Transformation
The discussion begins with reference to a major scientific achievement — the first photographed image of a black hole located in the M87 galaxy, approximately 55 million light years away from Earth. Scientists estimated its mass to be around 6.5 billion solar masses and its size to be nearly 38 billion kilometers. The image was captured through the Event Horizon Telescope project using eight telescopes working together. According to modern science, the Milky Way galaxy itself may contain nearly 100 million black holes.
Einstein had proposed the theory of black holes many decades earlier, but it took almost a century for humanity to receive direct visual evidence. Earlier, black holes were treated as theoretical possibilities. Now, science accepts their existence as reality.
The host then asks a profound question:
“Are we living inside a black hole?”
Bapuji answers that from a higher cosmic perspective, the entire multiverse itself appears like a black hole. However, to understand this deeply, one must first understand the formation of black holes, cosmic cycles, Shiva tattva, pralaya (dissolution), and the structure of the multiverse.
How Black Holes Are Formed According to Spiritual Cosmology
Modern science explains that when the lifespan of a star ends, it may collapse into a black hole. But Bapuji asks a deeper question: If suns themselves were created by divine cosmic intelligences, then who creates black holes?
According to the discourse, black holes are connected with cosmic dissolution processes. Small black holes, large black holes, galactic supermassive black holes, universal black holes, and multiversal black holes all exist at different levels of creation. Black holes possess immense gravitational force capable of consuming entire galaxies. Bapuji explains that this force originates from deeper soul-energy and cosmic power.
The discourse connects black holes with cycles of destruction described in ancient Indian cosmology:
After four yugas comes Ardha Pralaya (partial dissolution)
Multiple such cycles create larger dissolutions
Fourteen Manvantars create Kalpa Pralaya
Greater dissolutions culminate in Mahakalpa Pralaya and Mahakal Pralaya
These dissolutions are not random destruction but cosmic transformation cycles.
Shiva, Kaal Agni, and Cosmic Dissolution
According to the teachings presented in the discourse, the lifespan of a universe equals one hundred years of Brahma. When the sustaining power of Shiva gradually declines, cosmic dissolution begins. Bapuji explains that Shiva enters the sun and generates Kaal Agni — the fire of time and destruction. Through immense gravity, the universe begins collapsing inward.
He describes the universe as an enormous field of light whose radius extends trillions of kilometers. During cosmic dissolution, everything is absorbed inward, and even a sun itself can become a black hole.
During Mahakal Pralaya:
Entire universes dissolve
Galaxies collapse
Cosmic structures are withdrawn
Mahashiva absorbs countless universes within Himself
This state becomes the supreme cosmic black hole. The discourse repeatedly states that when Shiva creates, He is auspicious and luminous. When the power of creation diminishes, Shiva manifests as Mahakaal through Kaal Agni and black hole states.
Gravity, Souls, and Black Holes
Science explains gravity mechanically, but Bapuji associates gravity with soul-consciousness itself. He says that without soul-energy, gravity would not exist.
The discourse explains:
Every moment countless universes are being created and dissolved
Dissolved universes become black hole states
Black holes are directly connected with Shiva consciousness
Black holes are manifestations of Shiva’s sankalpas (divine intentions)
“Kaal” is explained as: Time, Power, Motion
Thus, black holes are not merely astronomical objects but manifestations of cosmic transformational forces.
Can Earth and the Solar System Be Consumed?
The host asks whether another black hole could one day consume our solar system. Bapuji replies that if the sun itself were consumed, Earth would naturally also be consumed. He states that just as there are countless suns in galaxies, there are also countless black holes — many invisible to human observation.
However, he also says there is no need for fear because creation and dissolution are eternal cosmic processes. Universes continuously emerge and dissolve.
Is a Black Hole the End or a New Beginning?
A key philosophical question is raised:
Is a black hole the end of existence or the beginning of a new creation?
Bapuji explains that destruction itself becomes the foundation for new creation. The cycles of yugas, pralayas, and cosmic dissolutions all exist so that renewal can occur. Thus, black holes represent both dissolution and preparation for new cosmic manifestation.
What Happens to Souls During Cosmic Dissolution?
The discourse explains that lower worlds and physical forms dissolve during cosmic destruction. However, souls of higher categories — souls of supreme light — are not destroyed even by supermassive black holes. Souls move according to their spiritual level:
Some move to Janlok
Some to Maharlok
Some to Swarglok
Some to Taplok
Higher souls ascend to even subtler dimensions
But during complete universal dissolution, even entire cosmic systems and souls associated with those systems undergo dissolution into higher cosmic consciousness.
The Three Levels of Existence
Bapuji explains three categories of cosmic existence:
Nirakari Brahmand — Formless realm
Akari Brahmand — Subtle formed realm
Sakari Brahmand — Physical material realm
During Mahakal Pralaya:
Material worlds burn in Kaal Agni
Elemental structures dissolve
Even Akash Tattva (space element) dissolves into black hole states
This dissolution includes: Humans, Animals, Spirits, Devas- Danavas, Astral beings, Elemental beings
Black Hole or White Hole?
The host reminds Bapuji that he once said black holes are not truly black but white holes. Bapuji explains that when Shiva reconnects with higher cosmic power sources, destructive force transforms again into luminous creative force. Thus black hole states can eventually become white-hole-like states connected with renewed creation.
The discourse introduces hierarchical cosmic creators:
Shiva
Mahashiva
Param Mahashiva
Higher and higher cosmic intelligences across multiversal levels
Each receives power from higher dimensions.
The Temporary Nature of Earth and Humanity
The discourse emphasizes that humanity mistakenly assumes Earth will continue forever. However, according to these teachings, all worlds undergo cycles of creation and dissolution.
Earth itself experiences: Creation> Sustenance> Dissolution> Recreation
Thus, one day humanity’s present world will also end.
Science and Spiritual Knowledge
Bapuji says he had spoken about black holes and cosmic dissolution since 1997, long before scientific imaging confirmed black holes visually.
He also mentions a 2008 book titled:
“Mahakalpa Dissolution of Countless Universes”
The host explains that the book discusses scriptural cosmology, cosmic destruction cycles, and multiversal knowledge in detail. The discourse states that science is still in its infancy because it has not yet understood consciousness and soul-energy completely.
Multiverse Transformation and the “Blackverse”
The discussion then expands beyond galaxies toward multiversal cosmology. Bapuji states:
Universes contain supermassive black holes
Greater universes contain even larger black holes
Entire multiverses can enter black-hole-like states called “Blackverse”
He explains that our present multiverse has already undergone such transformations previously twice. From higher dimensions, the entire multiverse appears like a tiny black dot. He says that advanced souls observe these transformations from higher realities and have incarnated on Earth to witness and participate in cosmic transformation processes.
Connection with Other Spiritual Traditions
The host references the book The Convoluted Universe by Dolores Cannon, which describes universes moving toward higher dimensions and toward their Creator.
The host asks how Christian mystics could possess similar knowledge.
Bapuji replies that souls and beings from distant galaxies, universes, and higher dimensions incarnate or communicate through subtle realms. Such beings inspire spiritual writings and revelations across many religions and traditions. He says some souls from higher universes influence human minds and inspire books, teachings, and revelations through subtle spiritual transmission.
Additional Clarifications Based on Behad Ka Gyan and Dashrathbhai Patel’s Teachings
“Pratipal Ananta Ananta Brahmand” refers to the continuous creation and dissolution of countless universes every cosmic moment.
“Kaal Agni” refers to the cosmic destructive fire generated during dissolution cycles.
“Blackverse” appears to describe a multiverse entering a dormant or collapsed black-hole-like condition.
“Power exhaustion” of Shiva refers not to literal weakness but to completion of a cosmic cycle of manifestation.
“Anti-gravity within souls” refers to the subtle spiritual force beyond material gravitational physics.
“Dots seen from higher multiverses” symbolizes how lower universes appear insignificant from higher-dimensional realities.
References to creators of religions and universes coming from distant galaxies align with Bapuji’s teachings about advanced souls incarnating from higher cosmic civilizations.
Statements regarding “white holes” appear connected with renewed creation phases following dissolution cycles.
The repeated idea that destruction creates new worlds reflects the principle that pralaya is preparation for higher creation rather than absolute annihilation.

Explore the deep spiritual connection between black holes, Shiva, Mahakal Pralaya, and the multiverse based on the teachings of Bapuji Dashrathbhai Patel. Discover how cosmic dissolution, Kaal Agni, supermassive black holes, soul consciousness, higher dimensions, and Behad Ka Gyan explain the mysteries of the universe beyond modern science