The Third Eye's Fury: How Shiv's Anger Birthed the Mighty Jalandhar
Indra, the king of the gods, and Brihaspati, the guru of the gods, once argued over which of them was greater. They decided to go to Mount Kailash and ask Lord Shiv to settle their dispute.
Indra and Brihaspati reached the snowy Mount Kailash. They proceeded to Lord Shiv's abode but were stopped by a yogi wearing a necklace of skulls and matted hair. Indra introduced himself and his guru to the yogi and asked him about Lord Shiv's whereabouts. But the yogi refused to answer Indra's question.
Enraged by the yogi's silence, Indra attacked him with his Thunderbolt. But no sooner had he raised the weapon than the yogi paralyzed him with his magical powers. The yogi was none other than Lord Shiv in disguise, who had assumed this form to test Indra and Brihaspati.
The furious yogi transformed into Lord Shiv. He opened his third eye, and fire emanated from it. But before the fire could burn Indra, Brihaspati begged Shiv to forgive his unwitting student. On Brihaspati's request, the merciful Lord Shiv redirected the fire from his third eye into the ocean.
Indra was grateful to his guru for saving his life. He accepted that Brihaspati was his superior, and the two returned to the land of the gods.
Meanwhile, the fire that had emanated from Shiv's third eye came into contact with the ocean and turned into a young demon with extraordinary power. Since he emerged from the ocean, Hindus regard him as the son of the Ocean god and the younger brother of Goddess Lakshmi. (Recall that Lakshmi, the consort of Vishnu, had also emerged from the ocean during The Churning.) Shukracharya, the guru of the demons, named the young demon Jalandhar (literally, 'he who holds water') because he was born in water. He trained Jalandhar, who would eventually become one of the most powerful demons ever.