The Cosmic Hitlist: Why the Mahabharata’s Strongest Warrior Was Destined to Become History’s Most Depressing Janitor
How Bheema killed six demigods, saved the world, and got dumped in the snow for being too good at his job Something uncomfortable about the Mahabharata. We treat Bheema like a joke. The big guy. The glutton. The one who eats five people’s worth of food and snores through philosophy lessons. He’s the musclehead brother, the comic relief before he inevitably rips someone’s spine out through their nose. But Vyasa was playing a much darker game. Hidden inside the epic is a structural myth called the “League of Eight Destinies.” Eight titans of raw, world-breaking physical power. Jarasandha. Duryodhana. Kichaka. Shishupala. Kalyavan. Bakusura. Hidimbasura. And Bheema himself. According to the prophecy, these eight were cosmically bound to destroy one another. Their overlapping martial energy made it impossible for them to coexist. Think of it as the original Highlander rule: in the end, there could be only one. The designated executioner? Bheema. He was the universe’s hired muscl...