A Jewel From My Mother's Crown
A Jewel From My Mother's Crown
What distinguishes a child from an adult? Given a choice between food and play, a child prefers
play and an adult prefers food. But both like excitement. Excitement and play build relationships
and bonds people into friendships. Most adults have lost their freshness, passion and playfulness,
forgetting and forgiving easily, the characteristics of little children. If the society is to be more
tolerant, cooperative and creative, we need to reintroduce play function into learning. We need
playful divine mentors who hold hands for the seekers in need of guidance.
Our vision is to develop childlike freshness and play to connect seekers with divine hierarchy of
angels and gurus to hold their hands every step of the way. Śrī Cakra has plenty of such playful
angelic mentors in the form of parivara devatas and lineage of gurus.
This book attempts to demystify Lalitā Navāvarana Pūjā. It explains the basic concepts of
Mantra, Yantrā and Tantrā of Śrī Vidyā in fair detail. Having said this, I must confess that
learning Śrī Vidyā is not easy. It is a serious lifelong study to understand that you are not just a
body having a life, but you are life itself going through different levels: body, cosmos and pre-
cosmos. It identifies you with the universal I in the whole world rising above negatives (1. Hatred
2. Doubt 3. Fear 4. Shame 5. Abhorrence 6. Class 7. Race 8. Conduct) and cultivating purities (1.
Food, 2. Breathing, 3. Thinking, 4. Intuition 5. Joy). You need to commit to improve your life in
every-which-way.
What is the entry point to such a serious study?
I call it Siri Jyoti, abundant light. In it, young and old gather in fun to draw a complicated Śrī
Yantrā and learn geometry of the soul’s journey, decorate it with flowers and lotuses which are
psychic powers, and put collective life into their own bodies, connect to the one life coursing in
all of us. It is all in a fun-filled day of community action. It yields positive experiences very soon.
I believe it is a perfect introduction to serious study of Śrī Vidyā. It is the play class before
kinder-garden. The desire to study builds up with experience and understanding. We give this
process as an appendix; yet it is easily the most important thing to learn first.
What is divinity? Divinity is caring for life in all, the characteristic of leadership.
So, let us get the ball rolling.
Guruji Amṛtānanda
www.devīpuram.com
2 | PREFACE
It has been just over twenty five years since Guruji (Śrī la Śrī Amṛtānanda Nātha Sarasvatī)
published the book “Śrī Cakrā Pūjā”. This golden book with a blue hard cover is often, very
dearly, referred to as the “Blue Book” by his disciples. Year 2013 was the Silver Jubilee of the
“Blue Book”. In the current environment (Kali Yuga) devotees are cramped for time to engage in
extensive external spiritual exercises. Guruji in his great abundance of love and compassion to
teach all humankind without any reservation to race, caste or creed took great effort to gift us
this “Blue Book” for “nityā pūjā” i.e. Perform the pūjā / ritual at home daily in a short time. He
expended intense efforts to extract the essence from the Paraśurāmā Kalpa Sūtra into this “Blue
Book”, ensured simplicity and captured all the essentials to realize the benefits of performing the
Śrī Chakrā pūjā / ritual.
In this publication many of Guruji’s writings, talks and interviews have been consolidated and
collated to provide a comprehensive view and thorough understanding of the Śrī Cakrā pūjā.
Extensive, authentic, explanations are delivered coherently in every step of the ritual to help the
reader understand the functionality and the entailing effects of these rituals. It is not the
execution of a puja in a mundane manner but the translations and explanations that render you
realize and rejoice in the true meaning of undivided unity with the Divine and the cosmos. He has
articulated in very simple ways the integration of the Mantra, Yantra and Tantra to experience the
Divine in you and understand the Śrī Cakra, as a symbolic representation, to the gateway of the
microcosm of the atoms, an individual and the cosmos. The reader will also observe the power of
visualization is implied in a very subtle manner. With the intent to instill Guruji’s teachings, as
delivered by him, with no adulteration to the authenticity of Guruji’s parlance, limited editing has
been exercised in the compilation of this book. These rituals in the subject of Śrī Vidyā is
intensely sublime and rewarding, leads to a direct experience of yourself as a wave of beauty,
bliss arising from the ocean of pure consciousness in you, experience you and your body as a
living shrine and the cakras as altars in that shrine. Illustrations have been included to visually
aid the reader without compromising the imagination. The elements and details, in this book,
constitute to an encyclopedic Śrī Cakra pūjā. For a beginner it could take more than one attempt
of concentrated reading to absorb the underlying meanings but will be a rewarding exercise…it is
a TREAT.
Part-3 of this book allows the disciple to follow either the external worship of the Śrī Cakrā Pūjā
or internal worship with Bindu Bhedhanam (very specific to Śrī Vidyā that requires deep
concentration and should not be attempted without the guidance of your Guru). Part-4 provides
the choice of performing the Śakti pūjā using Triveṇī Kalpam (another masterpiece from Guruji)
or Śrī Sūktam.
Guruji has come to us as a Guru, father, brother, friend, ascetic and yati and dedicated his life to
guide us in spiritualism, teach to love unconditionally, empower and respect all fellow beings.
This year (2014) he completes his 80th birthday referred to as the “Śata Abhiṣekam”- having
experienced 1000 pourṇamīs (full moons) in this life cycle. This publication is offered at his
golden feet, as part of this inauguration, titled “A jewel from my Mother’s crown” and is
endowed to all by Śrī la Śrī Amṛtānanda Nātha Sarasvatī - a “Diamond Book”.
First you worship the Guru, then you make your bath a ritual by invoking the Goddess into you and
worshipping Her in your body. When you are taking a bath, you are indeed giving a bath to Her, without
any sense of shame. The sense of shame comes from the notion of the other. Fear and shame go away when
you realize that whom you are worshipping is your own self. You can recite the Śrī Sūktam and all the
Sūktams that you know when you are taking bath because you are indeed the Goddess.
Next you worship the forty-four triangles of the Śrī Cakra. Think of the central part of Śrī Cakra as a
beautiful palace of jewels and the most beautiful things in the world, where Śivā and Śakti are making
love among celestial dancers, and nymphs, in a very erotic place filled with beauty and harmony and
grace and loving couples.
You realize that you are in a very limited state of being and you try to overcome this state by resetting
yourself to the state of being the Goddess. How do you do that? By thinking like this:
"OK, I am sixty years old now. So what? Age is just a concept. I am also a 16 year old girl bubbling
with joy and happiness and not crippled by my age, or pulled down by my worries. I am free and I want
to look at every moment as an opportunity to grow in whatever way I can and to help others in
whatever way I can. I will share my beauty, share my joy, my bubbling enthusiasm and power with
others. This is what I am, this is what I will do."
So saying, I reset myself to this state by getting rid of this old, useless, stupid, worrisome, kind of
existence that I am going through and say, "Let me burn this body and get rid of all the muck that I have
acquired through social conditioning and programming. I will reconstitute my body to be forever 16,
beautiful, powerful." This aspect of the pūjā is called the Virajā Homaṃ.
Then you imagine that you have just become a body of light. And you merge with the cosmos and become
a ball of light. This ball of light condenses and turns into the most beautiful, most harmonious, most
loving, most wonderful, most powerful and most enriching kind of a being. You are a 16 year old girl,
Ananda Bhairavī. She is enjoying herself nonstop with her consort Ananda Bhairava, playfully acting all
the moods , and out of their enjoyment is coming this world full of beauty, of harmony of loving, of caring,
of compassion. It is not the world demarcated as Germany, Austria, Denmark, North America, South
America, Canada, Brazil, India, Pakistan, and China.
When you fly, you go to the sky, you go to the satellites, do you see any boundaries there? None. It is we
that created our boundaries. If the world was governed by women who care for their children then they
would come forward and say, let's get rid of all these boundaries and make one world. It’s too small, it’s
just one village and we can't afford to destroy it. We won't destroy our children, we will teach them to be
loving and caring.
Thus you go through the process of creating an immortal body for yourself. It is going to continue to
exist after your mortal coil has been shed. It will continue to do good because you are going to evolve
through the fourteen different worlds. This you do with the power of your imagination, the power of your
creativity, your visualization acuteness, the clarity with which you can perceive things with these things
you create an image. This image goes and does whatever good it does. It is just like a child born out of
you which continues its existence independent of you. You can try to control it. You can try to make a
friend of it. You can create eight simultaneous existences which can work independently. Why eight? It is
eight because the properties of God are eightfold. They are spatially different. Actually, time wise you
can have sixteen different forms.
After you do the Virajā homaṃ, you do Vajra Pañjara Nyāsam. It means that you are creating for
yourself an indestructible cage. This cage has the power of the Śrī Cakra. As long as the Śrī Cakra and the
cosmos exist, you are going to live in this cage. Once the world is dissolved, you dissolve. You are
merging with Śivā. That is the format you are trying to create for yourself.
Lalitā is a Goddess who is transcendental and immanent (existing beyond the known and also in the
known). Her main rasā is Śringārā or the erotic sentiment. Dharmā, arthā and kāmā are all obtained
here; mokśā is obtained here and there by the upāsanā (regular worship) of Śri Lalitā, whose mūla mantra
is the Pañcadaśī (15-lettered mantra beginning with the letter ‘ka’). Upāsanā of this Brahmavidyā is
given fully here without any omissions.
The tradition followed here is that given by Guru Dattātreya to Paraśurāmā, who has codified it in his
Kalpa Sūtrās. Dattātreya is a combination of the determination of Brahmā (Icchā Śakti), the knowledge of
Viṣṇu (Jñāna Śakti) and the action of Śiva (Kriyā Śakti).
The other tradition comes from Dakṣiṇāmūrti. It follows an identical procedure to this except that there
are no external props required for pūjā, such as a Śrī Yantrā or a suvāsini etc. It is fully meditative in
character. It demands a study of the Vēdas for 18 years under a proper Guru before this sādhanā is taken
up. As such, it cannot be prescribed for all people in the present age of kali. The Dattātreya tradition does
not require such austerities. It can be performed by all people irrespective of caste, colour, creed or
religion. Although it is an external worship, it combines in it all the benefits of internal worship too.
Because of the external nature of the worship, it can help others also in getting liberated.
4.3 Morning Meditation - Guru Mantra
In the above, insert the names of the Guru Patnī and the Guru who have given you dīkśā. The meaning of
the mantra is roughly as follows:
Knowledge about the nature of illusion and the nature of grace; of creation, protection and absorption;
life-breath Śiva, Śakti; I am all that I see; eliminate the names and the forms in my mind for space travel;
move the Kuṇḍalinī from ājñā to mūlādhārā and upto viśuddhi and vice versa; that such is my nature is
proved to me by my Śrī Guru’s Power and Śrī Guru; I worship the two feet of Devī as the feet of my Guru
with flowers and with water.
The real Guru, Goddess/God speaks through the Guru, who can be either female or male. Don't confuse the Guru with a physical form. The
Guru of everyone is one and the same. And that is God/Goddess. Guru appears to different people in different forms, but the form is only a
symbol. You have to look behind the symbol to the truth and that truth is called Jagannātha. Jagat means world, Nātha means husband/wife,
the husband/wife of the manifested world. The Guru is referred to as the husband/wife here, so that you can open up your body, mind and soul
without any inhibitions for deepest truths can be learned without inhibitions.
Śrī Guru is the guru who is the source of all powers; Śrī who is the wealth of the Lord is the Guru. In the Bhāvana Upaniṣad it says, “The
Guru confers the wealth of the Lord on you".
Śrī Pādukām the beneficial, auspicious lotus feet of the Guru which he has placed on the top of your head. You are not to think of the form of
the Guru like this, but as Ardhanārīśvara which is half Śivā, male, and half female, Śakti. In that form the right half is the male part and the
left part is the female part. They are eternally united at all the cakra centers from the Mūlādhārā all the way up. Out of their union, their
eternal union flows the bliss as the Gaṅgā flows from the head of Śivā. It overflows and falls down to Śivā's feet where it becomes nectar
flowing onto the top of your head. It is that Guru who you must see.
Tarpayāmi - What is tarpaṇam? That which gives you satisfaction. What makes you say, "Yes, I have had enough, I don't need any more"?
Having reached that state is called tarpaṇam. It means you must be able to make the guru feel totally satisfied, that you have rendered all that
you are possible or capable of doing. You have given him the supreme happiness of whatever he desires, that is tarpaṇam. I worship him (the
Guru can be male or female), I adore the feet, I make the Lord and His power totally satisfied. What is the desire of the God or the Goddess?
They are both self-fulfilled.
What desires could they have? Although you are saying I am satisfying the Guru, what it really means is that you are satisfying yourself. It is
you who are not having the fulfilled state. You are identifying with the Guru. It is you who are trying to reach the state of the Guru, the Lord
and his infinite Power. You are trying to fulfill yourself. Pūjayāmi means you are worshipping the Guru as your own manifestation outside and
satisfying her/him means satisfying yourself.
The meaning of the guru mantra tells you the purpose for which you are doing the pūjā, what it is you want to understand, the result gained by
that (Hamsaḥ śiva sōham), what the result is going to do for you hskphrēm, the paths through the different cakras which you must take the
kuṇḍalinī and your awareness. You adore the feet of the guru who has given you initiation.
To understand Hasakṣamalavarayūm Hsaum and Sahakṣamalavarayīm Sahauḥ we need to know a little bit about what is called the
Mātṛkā Nyāsa. Mātṛkās mean the garland of letters of Sanskrit alphabet. Nyāsa means placement in the body.
In the Mātṛkā nyāsa, the sixteen vowels are placed around the neck.
The 12 consonants kam to ṭham around the chest,
next 10 ḍam to pham around waist,
next 6 bam to lam around the genital,
next 4 vam to sam near the sacrum (cervix),
ham, kṣam in the right and left eyes respectively.
All the 50 letters have specific locations in the body; they may be called short addresses to refer to body parts. The Sanskrit alphabets are
located in different petals on the lotuses which are linked to the stem of your spinal cord. Next you have to understand where Ha is located,
where Sa is located, where Kṣa is located, where la is located, va, ra, and u are located.
When you locate them all, you will discover a path traced by these seed letters. Hasakṣamalavarayūm and Sahakṣamalavarayīm are the
two paths of light traced by locating where the letters are in your body.
The Guru mantra teaches you how to move awareness in specific parts of your body to move Kuṇḍalinī in the Iḍā and Piṅgalā Nāḍīs. This is
the Mantra Yoga path to Kuṇḍalinī.
4.4 Morning Meditation - Devī’s Form
Meditate on Mother Goddess. In the sky, dark clouds gathering, hear the
thunder and see the lightning. Feel the rain falling on your body, visualize the
form of the Mother Goddess giving out rose coloured light, briefly appearing
in the flashes of lightning, and body wet in the rain.
From Mūlādhāra to Brahmarandhrā; flashing like a crore of lightnings;
throwing out red streams of corona from the red fire ball of sun in the early
morning. Such is the appearance of the fundamental knowledge that is Devī.
(By this meditation, all sins are eliminated).
Recite the Pañcadaśī Mantra of Devī given below:
ka ē ī la hrīm ha sa ka ha la hrīm sa ka la hrīm (10 times)
This is called the Pañcadaśī Mahā Vidyā, also called mūla mantra.
Sūrya Mantra - Worshipping your body and invoking the light of Sun within you when bathing. When you are taking bath imagine that
between your navel cakra and the heart cakra is the sun.
Hrām Hrīm Hrūm Saḥ Mārtaṇḍa Bhairavāya Prakāśa Śakti sahitāya svāhā
When you are taking bath you offer three spoons of water to your own navel saying this prayer to the sun, Sūrya.
Mārtaṇḍa Bhairavāya means the fierce Sun with his illuminating power. Light by itself does not illuminate. It is knowledge which illuminates.
Light can be seen. But a seeing awareness is a higher form of light. Threfore, it is called a paramjyoti. Jyoti is the light which enables the
darkness to be removed and things to be seen. But without awareness the light or darkness cannot be seen. The light of light is the awareness.
Consciousness is the true light by which the sun, the moon, the stars and the fires shine. Everything is known by your awareness. If you are
unconscious this world does not exist for you. Awareness is the highest form of light which itself is never seen. The light is something which
can be seen. Once you are able to see anything, even light, then the separation between the seer and the seen manifest. When you don't see,
then you are in union with that which is seen. Then you know it by being it, not seeing it.
Prakāśa means illumination. That is the power.
Hrām, Hrīm, Hrūm are the bīja mantras for the sun. Hrīm is the Māyā, the power that brings life to you. It is life-giving power that comes
from the sun. That is why when the sun comes up in the sky we get up and go about doing our daily chores. The life force comes from the
sun. That is the Mahā kuṇḍalinī Śakti wakes us up. Therefore we offer to the light which is visible, (the symbol of the light which is visible)
three spoons of water. Why water? Because that also represents life, the seed, the semen. Next think of Sun: Hrām Hrīm Hrūm Saḥ is the
mantra. That cannot be replaced by English text. You may treat the next part as mantra, or you may use the English translation of it." To the
orb of the sun along with its power to illuminate, residing between my heart and navel, I offer this water as a symbol of my life." So saying,
sprinkle water there.
4.6 Devī Mantra Japam
Look at the morning sun or the Śrī Cakra, and offer to Sūryā 3 spoonful
of water with the Tripurā Gāyatri given below:
ka ē ī la hrīm tripurasundarī vidmahe (the face)
ha sa ka ha la hrīm pītha kāmini dhīmahi (the breasts)
sa ka la hrīm tannaḥ klinne pracodayāt (the genitals)
Recite Pañcadaśī 108 times, and remain silent in the mind afterwards
for as long as possible, quelling all thoughts, enter the prayer (pūjā)
room.
For gaining Icchā Śakti, Jñāna Śakti and Kriyā Śakti is by focusing your awareness in the face, the breasts or in the yonī. It is the
adoration of these aspects, of creativity, of nourishment and of knowledge.
Sprinkle water on the three parts of your own body with erotic parts of Devī mantra:
- Your face, with ka ē ī la hrīm,
- Your breasts and navel with ha sa ka ha la hrīm, and
- Your genitals sa ka la hrīm.
The identification goes like this:
- ka ē ī are the three eyes,
- la hrīm is the mouth and tongue;
- ha sa and ka ha are the two breasts with the nipples,
- la hrīm is the navel and line of hairs below;
- sa ka are the two sides of vulva and
- la hrīm is the clitoral shaft and the tip.
This is the mantra nyāsa revealed to Amṛtānanda by Hlādinī Śakti (love power of Kṛṣṇa).
Tripurasundarī Vidmahe: Tripura means three cities. The three cities are the waking state, the dreaming state and the sleeping state. In all
these three states of your being, the most beautiful is Sundarī Vidmahe; vid - knowing intuitively. From this vid comes Vēda. We learn about
Mahā Vidyā through intuition. The beauty of this universe that exists in these three states of being, I come to know by meditating on the three
procreative powers of the Goddess.
Pītha kāmini dhīmahi: she has the desire to be on that place, pītha, in the lotus of your heart. Śrī Lakṣmī and Nārāyaṇa are the nourishing
and preserving powers which come from the milk from your two breasts. That is where she is residing. Dhi - And when you meditate on this
power in the heart center it gives you Dhi - the ability to discriminate. To discriminate between good and bad and to accept the good and the
bad with love and affection.
Sa ka la hrīm: Sa ka la hrīm is the active Śakti, which moves Śivā to create a new awareness. When you worship that, then tannaḥ klinne
pracodayāt. Tannaḥ - that may it propel us toward klinne-wetness. We are normally located in our Mūlādhārā cakra assuming the rigidity of
our bodies. The first transformation is from rigidity to flow. Like liquid you try to create a flow. That means the starting of the movement of
the kuṇḍalinī Śakti from the rigidity of solid (earth cakra) to the liquid state (the second cakra) and then to lightness. This refers to the
orgasmic release from all of your tensions including sexual tensions. With this mantra you do prokṣaṇa (sprinkling) to the three parts of your
body.
Enter the temple with a vessel of water, akśatās and flowers. Wear
rudrākśās if you wish to. Think of an elephant – headed Gaṇapathi.
Ring the bell. Recite the Tripurā Gāyatri given above and place a
flower and akśatās on the seat. Sit comfortably.
The lamp with vegetable oil has a red wick. It is to your left, and
Devī’s right.
The lamp with a white wick dipped in ghee and camphor is towards your right and Devī’s left.
4.8 Flowers to Guru’s Light
Light these two lamps. Listen to the anāhatā sound within. Offer a white flower to the
ghee lamp and a red flower to the oil lamp saying:
Aim hrīm śrīm rakta dvādaśa śakti yuktāya dīpa nāthāya namaḥ
This means: to the Guru who is in the form of this light here, accompanied by the 12
Śaktis always attached to him, I request him to illuminate me as to the nature of
immanence and transcendence.
Offer flowers to the light which is a form of guru who is showing the Goddess to you.
Lighting the Lamp
Aim hrīm śrīm Rakta Dvādaśa Śakti Yuktāya Dīpa Nāthāya Namaḥ
When we enter the temple, the first thing we do is to light up the lamp. The lamp is the symbol of the guru. The guru, like the lamp removes
your ignorance, the darkness. Rakta dvādaśa - rakta means the blood. Dvādaśa means twelve. Śakti yuktāya - associated with the twelve
powers. The twelve powers are located in the heart center. The heart center has the 12 petalled lotus there. The guru is located in the heart
center. Ratka also means the raja guṇa, the desire for movement, the desire to move the heart. That is the kind of knowledge that the guru
gives. Deepa nāthāya namaḥ - deepa is the light, the lamp. You light the lamp and say the guru is not here, so this is my guru thereby, the
invocation of your spiritual guide immediately. You do not think of the guru as the individual, but as the light.
What about the white and the red wicks on the two lamps kept on two sides? White and red are the colors of the semen and blood. The
semen is white and the blood is red. Both are sticky things which are very objectionable to the priests. Therefore, the ritual prescribed by
priests uses symbols for them. However, these two substances contain the DNA and RNA codes essential for creating Life. On one side you
have the white wick, which symbolizes the semen and on the other side the red wick which symbolizes the blood.
Oil is the symbol of the female orgasmic fluid (offer red flower) and ghee is the symbol of semen (offer white flower). That is why
we offer ghee into the homaṃ, a fire ritual. The homakuṇḍa is supposed to be the female genital. Into that you offer the seed. Every
offering, every act of pūjā in ritual is suggestive of a release of every tension, an orgasm, called Brahmānanda, the ānanda of Brahma, of
creation. The word orgasm is not being used in any limited sense. Any release of tension is orgasm. When you are facing a situation where
tension is developed, the moment you resolve or release the tension, resolution of a conflict that is called an orgasm in Tantrā.
4.9 Meaning of "aim hrīm śrīm"
You can make a Śrī Cakra consisting of its 9 enclosures; the central
portion of the Śrī Cakra consists of 5 Śakti triangles (with their angles
pointing downwards) and 4 Śivā triangles (with their apex pointing
away from you). The size of the Śrī Cakram to be drawn is 12 inches. If
you do not know how to draw the Śrī Cakra, you can use a Śrī Cakra
made out of gold (100 years), silver (50 years), pañca lohā (25 years),
ratnā or red-coloured single crystal (200 years) or transparent quartz
crystal (500 years). If you have none of these, you may have a suvāsini
as a Śrī Cakram. The Śrī Cakram represents the body of Śiva and Śakti
in union. This means that it represents you and the cosmos in union.
|| Ōm aim hrīm śrīm, ām hrīm krōm| yam ram lam vam, śam ṣam sam ham| ōm hamsaḥ sōham,
sōham hamsaḥ śivaḥ, śrī cakrasya śrī lalitāyāḥ mama prāṇaḥ, iha prāṇaḥ, mama jīvastiṣthatu,
mama sarvēndriyāni, vānmanaś cakṣuḥ śrōtra, jihvā ghrāṇā, vāk pāṇi, pāda pāyūpastha lingāni,
asmin śrī cakre, asyāḥ nijadēhe, sukham ciram tiṣthantu svāhā |
Ōm asunītē, punarasmāsu cakṣuḥ, punaḥ prāṇa-mihanō, dhēhi bhōgam | jyōk paṣyēma, sūrya-
muccaranta-manumatē-mṛḷayānaḥ svasti, amṛtam vai prāṇaḥ, amṛtam āpaha, prānānēva,
yathāsthānam, upahvayatē | prāṇa pratiṣṭhāpana, prōkṣaṇa, muhūrtaḥ sumuhūrto astu ||
4.12 Meditation on the Śrī Cakra - A Temple for Goddess
Place a dot of sandalwood paste in the central portion of the Śrī Cakra consisting of 44 triangles (14 + 10
+ 10 + 8 + 1 + 1 = 44). Each mantra is preceded by aim hrīm śrīm and succeeded by namaḥ:
1. Aim hrīm śrīm amṛtambhōnidhayē namaḥ (ocean of nectar)
Amṛtambhōnidhayē namaḥ; nidhi is an ocean; ambhaḥ is water; amṛta is nectar, or the ocean of nectar; namaḥ means I am that (ocean
of nectarine waters which give and support life).
2. Aim hrīm śrīm ratnadvīpāya namaḥ (island of jewels)
3. Aim hrīm śrīm nānā vṛkṣa mahōdyānāya namaḥ (great garden of trees)
4. Aim hrīm śrīm kalpa vṛkṣa vāṭikayai namaḥ (grove of wish-fulfilling trees)
Here are trees that when you sit beneath them whatever you wish is granted to you. (There is a trouble with that. If you, without thinking,
think of something bad, that also will happen for you. The kalpa vrkśa is a double-edged sword)
5. Aim hrīm śrīm santāna vāṭikayai namaḥ (grove for obtaining children)
We know we are going to die one day. To prolong our life we enter into relationships and we beget children. Begetting children is an attempt to
gain immortality. However, we will not gain immortality this way; but it is one of the aspirations of humanity, to have children and
grandchildren, and so on and to perpetuate the race.
Candana means the sandalwood paste, it also a symbol for semen. Haricandana is also called Raktacandana. (Rakta=blood) Hari is Viṣṇu.
The three fundamental entities are space, time and matter. Space consciousness is called Viṣṇu, time consciousness is called Śivā, and the
union between space and time, Śivā and Viṣṇu creates matter, Brahma. Haricandana is the vāsanā, rajoguṇa of Hari, which is the desire to
manifest the world in his womb of space. One of the forms of Viṣṇu is mohinī, who entices Śivā to emit his seed. That is why Haricandana
is called Raktacandana, the seed of the woman, the menstrual flow. Just as a woman exhibits flow between her monthly cycles, the woman
called mind exhibits the flow of desire to manifest thought forms between silences. This name means that there is a container (vāṭi) full of
haricandana.
A grove of hybiscus flowers, which are red in color with a red pestil in its center.
8. Aim hrīm śrīm pārijāta vāṭikāyai namaḥ (grove of pārijāta - a fragrant white flower with a red stem)
In the forest of hybiscus trees, there is a grove with white, very delicate and fragrant flowers with red stems which are called pārijāta.
9. Aim hrīm śrīm kadamba vātikāyai namaḥ (different kinds of flowering trees)
Kadamba is a garland of red flowers. All these things are relating to the different colors of red. You realize that they are all the different
shades of red in the yonī.
10. Aim hrīm śrīm puṣyarāga ratna prākārāya namaḥ (red jewel stone enclosure)
This is a diamond enclosure, which is sparkling white in color. Again that represents the seed. Vajra also means a thunderbolt and the ability to
keep the seed within as yogis do.
14. Aim hrīm śrīm vaiḍūrya ratna prākārāya namaḥ (yellow diamond enclosure)
15. Aim hrīm śrīm indranīla ratna prākārāya namaḥ (blue jewel enclosure)
16. Aim hrīm śrīm mukta ratna prākārāya namaḥ (pearl enclosure)
17. Aim hrīm śrīm marakata ratna prākārāya namaḥ (emerald enclosure)
18. Aim hrīm śrīm vidruma ratna prākārāya namaḥ (coral enclosure)
Coral enclosure. Again all of these are different colored enclosures, one inside the other.
The thousand petal lotus at the crown of the head (of the baby inside the womb.)
21. Aim hrīm śrīm amṛta vāpikāyai namaḥ (the well of nectar)
22. Aim hrīm śrīm ānanda vāpikāyai namaḥ (the well of happiness)
23. Aim hrīm śrīm vimarśa vāpikāyai namaḥ (the well of mantras)
Vimarśa is analysis. Prakarṣa and Vimarśa are the two feet of the guru. Prakarṣa is enlightenment (Śivā) and Vimarśa is analysis (the foot of
Devī). Your ability to discriminate between different paths to reach the goal you set for yourself is called vimarśa.
24. Aim hrīm śrīm bālātapōdgārāya namaḥ (glowing hall of the light of morning sun)
Bāla means young; ātapa is the sunlight; udgāra is the profusion. This means the profusion of the rising sun's light. (Sun represents passion,
and moon dispassion)
25. Aim hrīm śrīm candrikōdgārāya namaḥ (the hall of soft moonlight)
26. Aim hrīm śrīm mahāśṛṅgāra parighāyai namaḥ (the fanning enclosure of erotic sentiment)
Parighā is a barrage of the great sentiment of eros.
27. Aim hrīm śrīm mahā padmāṭavyai namaḥ (great forest of lotuses)
Mahāpadmā represents a huge number, 10 to the power of twenty. The size of the cosmos is 10 to the power of 20 times the size of the
human being. There are two great nidhis: the cosmos itself, and the awareness in the cosmos. The cosmos nidhi is Śivā and the awareness of
the cosmos called Śakti is the padmā nidhi; aṭavī means a forest. A forest of island universes is meant.
28. Aim hrīm śrīm cintāmaṇimaya rājāya namaḥ (the house of cintāmaṇi mantra)
Within the padmā nidhi is the jewel of thoughts and a house built of your imaginations. Cintāmaṇi is also a mantra "arkṣhmiryaum". It is
found in the classic text on worship of Devī by Ādi Śaṅkarā called Saundaryalaharī. There it states that you encapsulate the Pañcadaśī
mantra with cintāmaṇi; which is then offered in the fire of your imagination and you keep the fire glowing. This means offering ghee with the
mantra "arkṣhmiryaum ka ē ī la hrīm ha sa ka la hrīm sa ka la hrīm arkṣhmiryaum” to the fire's glow in your mind. If you are able to
visualise the fire, offering the seed along with the mantra, then all the attainments manifest. Lalitā Sahasranāmam talks of cidagni kuṇḍa
sambūtāyai namaḥ. Cit - means consciousness. In your awareness the fire is made and the fire is sustained by the mantra. The seed of the
cintāmaṇi mantra is being placed inside the light, and this cintāmaṇi flower is born and inside it you will see Devī, who will give you whatever
you ask Her, if it be Her wish to grant you that. The house of cintāmaṇi is the Śrī Cakra itself; the Śrī Cakra is first seen in meditation by Sage
Agastya; worship of Śrī Cakra gives Devī to sādhaka.
29. Aim hrīm śrīm pūrvāmnāya maya pūrvadvārāya namaḥ (Ŕg vēda is eastern entrance)
Next you see the outside doors of Śrī Cakra described. The ŕg vēda is the Eastern entrance. The ŕg vēda is the revelation of truth in
meditation. This is one way to reach the Goddess.
30. Aim hrīm śrīm dakṣiṇāmnāya maya dakśiṇadvārāya namaḥ (Yajur vēda is the southern entrance)
The yajur vēda is the southern entrance. Yajur vēda is the use of ṛk in rituals. Rituals are the second way to reach the Goddess.
31. Aim hrīm śrīm paścimāmnāya maya paścimadvārāya namaḥ (Sāma vēda is the western entrance)
The western entrance is the sāma vēda. Sāma vēda is singing the ṛk. Song and dance are the third way to reach the Goddess.
32. Aim hrīm śrīm uttarāmnāya maya uttara dvārāya namaḥ (Atharvaṇa vēda is the northern entrance)
The northern entrance is the atharvaṇa vēda. Atharvaṇa vēda is the practical use of the Vedic Hymns to achieve ends magically. Helping
others and yourself through Her grace is the fourth way of reaching the Goddess.
33. Aim hrīm śrīm ratna pradīpa valayāya namaḥ (circular enclosure of jewels)
34. Aim hrīm śrīm maṇimaya mahā simhāsanāya namaḥ (jewel throne)
The great throne guarded by Lions, is made out of jewels, sitting on four living pillars.
Significance of Lions: The seat of power is protected by lions. Anyone who wishes to climb the simhāsanā has to overcome them. It means,
one has to overcome all hiṃsā and become purely sāttvik to climb the throne.
35. Aim hrīm śrīm brahma mayaika mañca pādāya namaḥ (Brahmā is the first foot of the throne)
Brahmā is one of the legs. It represents the Mūlādhārā Cakra (the root cakra at the cervix).
36. Aim hrīm śrīm viṣṇu mayaika mañca pādāya namaḥ (Viṣṇu is the second foot of the throne)
The second leg is Viṣṇu. Viṣṇu is the Svādhiṣṭhāna cakra (2nd cakra at the entrance to birth channel).
37. Aim hrīm śrīm rudra mayaika mañca pādāya namaḥ (Rudrā is the third foot of the throne)
The next leg is made of Rudrā. Rudrā represents the Maṇipūra cakra (3rd cakra at the navel).
38. Aim hrīm śrīm īśvara mayaika mañca pādāya namaḥ (Īśvarā is the fourth foot of the throne)
The next leg is īśvarā which is the anāhatā cakra (the 4th, Heart cakra).
39. Aim hrīm śrīm sadāśiva mayaika mañca phalakāya namaḥ (Sadā Śivā is lying flat as the seat of the
throne)
40. Aim hrīm śrīm haṃsatūlikā talpāya namaḥ (featherbed of swan down)
Above the Viśuddhi cakra is a very soft swan down bed. It also means the soft yogic breath called the kevala kumbhaka. She is sitting softly
on the in going breath ‘So’ and on the outgoing breath ‘Ham’.
41. Aim hrīm śrīm haṃsatūlikā mahōpadhanāya namaḥ (great pillow of swan down)
A soft swan down cover. This is also the life floating on the breath. Tūla means a feather floating freely in the wind.
42. Aim hrīm śrīm kausumbhāstaraṇāya namaḥ (red-coloured satin bed sheet)
The world came to be from an initial explosion which lasted a trillionth trillionth trillionth of a second when only antigravity was present, which
became gravity after this time. Otherwise, one cannot explain the big bang. Because, when radius was zero, nothing would be allowed to
escape gravitational force from the point. This is considered a red blanket on which Śivā and Śakti enact their drama of creation.
43. Aim hrīm śrīm mahā vitānakāya namaḥ (the great fan)
The enclosure which prevents others from seeing what is happening inside. It is all inside the mind of the devotee. No one else can come
inside your cosmic mind and understand what is happening there.
44. Aim hrīm śrīm mahāmāyā yāvanikāyai namaḥ (the veil called mahāmāyā).
The covering māyā which separates you from that which you are seeing. Only when that separation is removed are you joined with Devī.
This completes the 44 meditations on the 44 triangles in the central parts of the Śrī Cakra.
You realize when you go through all these meditations, that you are really visualizing the form of the yonī. They are all different aspects of the
yonī, the mother of all, which can be properly called the female genital, or the cosmos, or even the mind.
You visualize the garbhālaya, the womb, as a beautiful garden and a beautiful temple. Actually the word garbhālaya means the womb which
is the temple in which the Mother Goddess of fertility and creativity resides. In olden times yonī was worshipped as the seat of the Goddess.
Phallic and female genital worship was the oldest of all forms of worship common to all religions.
4.13 Worshipping the Central Point and the Triangle
Keep sandal paste, flowers and akśatās near your hand and other materials needed for worship also to
your right (if you are a right-handed person). Naivēdyam is to be kept to your left. Offer a dot of gandhā at
the centre of the Śrī Cakra, at the corner towards you, at the corner towards your right and at the corner to
your left respectively with the following mantras:
Aim hrīm śrīm pañcadaśī namaḥ
Place a dot of sandal paste in the centre.
Aim hrīm śrīm ka ē ī la hrīm namaḥ
Place a dot of sandal paste at the corner facing you.
Aim hrīm śrīm ha sa ka ha la hrīm namaḥ
Place a dot of sandal paste at the corner towards your right.
Aim hrīm śrīm sa ka la hrīm namaḥ
Place a dot of sandal paste at the corner towards your left.
Virajā Homa
Now we are at a place in the ritual where we want to create an astral body that is going to continue after our existence, which is going to
continue doing well. That is done through the virajā homa. Whether we are males or females, whether we are young or old, whether we are
fat or thin, whether we are depressed or elated, no matter what our initial state is, we reset ourselves to the state of "I am 15 going on 16". For
that this whole process can be done in your own language, whatever that is. Sit comfortably, and imagine the following to the best of your
ability.
You imagine that your body is subject to decay and it is going to be burnt up some day. It has to become old, it has to merge with the elements,
it has happened now. Imagine the wind is coming and drying up your dead body. It’s just like bare bones. It is placed on the funeral pyre and lit
up. These are all visualizations. The more powerfully, the more clearly you can visualize seeing the flames in your mind's eye, hearing the
crackling of the fire, and the sparks fly, the better your experience will be. Water vapors rise from the body, and parts of the body are sticking
out and someone takes a stick and pushes them back into the fire. All these things are associated with a śmaśāna (a cremation ground). It is
worth watching a body burning at a funeral pyre because that is exactly what is going to happen to you. It’s all a drama and brings reality of
impermanence of life powerfully to your mind. You realize that all these things we do in life are just games that we are playing. You see the
whole body going up in smoke.
You visualize this scene. After the body is gone, all those things associated with the body are gone too. There is no lust, no possessions. Śivā is
supposed to have burned the whole cosmos and put the ashes of the cosmos on his head. Those are the three lines you see people wearing
associated with Lord Śivā. He has burnt all the gross forms, all the subtle forms, all the causal forms and all the ashes are being worn on his
head. He is in yoga. Nothing disturbs him. He continues as pure awareness. The liṅga is his characteristic.
After your body is reduced to ashes, stay in that state for a reasonably good time enjoying a calm mind undisturbed by thoughts like you never
enjoyed before. Next you imagine that dark clouds are gathering, that there are thunder showers, and lightening, and a rain of nectar falls on
the ashes. The ashes take a new shape. The new shape is a ball of light, brilliant like a thousand suns and cool like a thousand moons and
emiting billions of coloured rays of all the colors of the rainbow in different directions. This ball of light condenses into the form of Śivā and
Śakti in embrace, dancing with joy. Out of their dance, union, happiness comes this world. For the sake of pleasure this universe was born. For
the sake of pleasure you grow. When you become old and your body is taken over by disease, for the sake of release from pain, you die. The
only medicine, the only doctor is Hari, the Lord. Hari also known as Vāsudeva who resides in the heart center, he carries you like a child
through the cave of death and at the end of this there is a light. At the end of your life if you say the name of Vāsudeva, he will manifest and
carry you into the light.
Imagine that you have created the ball of light and you are like Śivā and Śakti. Śivā is fifteen, Śakti is sixteen. (Śivā is fifteen, representing
detachment as attributes of pañcadaśī. Śakti is sixteen, experiencing all aspects in life cycle as attributes of ṣoḍaśī). They have merged into a
brilliant ball of light again. Then, imagine that this ball of light has entered into your heart center and that you are emiting this light outside.
Whatever comes into contact with this light is getting purified and healed. There are different colors of light corresponding with different
frequencies and they have different powers associated with them.
You do prāṇāyāma three times. Along with exhalation and recitation of Pañcadaśī, this the ball of light is going out and forming ball outside,
and when you inhale with Pañcadaśī, this light is dissolving and coming inside and forming a ball inside. An inside and outside exchange is
taking place with the breath. You are existing inside your body and outside your body. And the breath is the connecting link between the two.
The way to do prāṇāyāma is as follows. Recite Pañcadaśī once while inhaling, twice holding the breath inside, once while exhaling, once
holding the breath outside. This constitutes one cycle of Prāṇāyāma. Also, the ball of light goes where the breath goes. During inhalation, it is
going in, with exhalation it is going out. Like this, you start with three rounds and gradually increase to fifteen rounds.
4.15 Pranāyāmā
Once you have become the ball of light, you have become Śivā, capable of projecting a laser beam through your third eye, and you have
become Śakti who can give nourishment by a mere look of compassion. You have the power to command the elements.
As Śivā you say that: all those elements apasarpantu may they go away, tē bhūtā yē bhūtā which elements, bhuvisamsthitāḥ are residing on
the ground near me, ye bhūtā and those elements, vighna kartāraḥ which are obstructing the progress of my sādhanā, tē naśyantu
śivājñāya may they be destroyed by Śivā's order. So saying, you burn them up from the fire of your third eye which shoots out like a
destructive laser beam. Visualize them as crooked beings, see them burn up. The feelings that bind you such as lust, anger, greed, jealousy,
preoccupation with security, all these are called bhūtās which create obstacles for you. They reside in the security center, the Mūlādhārā
cakra (bhuvisamsthitāḥ). Having become Śivā you make sure that they are burnt up.
4.17 Vajra Pañjara Nyāsam - the Diamond Cage
4.17.2 Karanyāsa
Let us remember that if you have done the Virajā Homaṃ visualizations properly, you are almost floating in space, you have lost your body
consciousness already, but now you have to proceed with the pūjā. You have to force your consciousness to come back to the body.
Therefore, there is a little twist here from the normal sequence to Karanyāsa (placing powers in fingers). Now, usually in these nyāsas, you
start with the 1.thumb 2. forefinger 3. middle finger, 4.ring finger, 5. little finger and 6. front and back of hands.
However, in this particular nyāsa with am ām sauḥ you start with your middle finger. This is to force your attention back to your limited body
identity and then to expand it back later, learning to attach and detach from body at will. This is like a musical scale of life. You reset yourself
to a thunderbolt in the crown cakra, the sahasrāra, then you bring yourself down to the mūlādhārā to become the body, and then you start
moving up again.
1. am madhyama bhyam namaḥ (thumb touching middle fingers),
2. ām anāmikābhyām namaḥ (ring fingers),
3. sauḥ kaniśtḥikābhyām namaḥ (little fingers),
4. am aṅguṣṭhābhyām namaḥ (forefingers touching thumbs),
5. ām tarjanībhyām namaḥ (thumbs touching forefingers),
6. sauḥ karatala karaprśdḥābhyām namaḥ (front and back of palms).
This thing looks tough, but a little demo from a guru will clear up the matters easily. Except the am ām sauḥ, which are the seed letters, the
rest of the Sanskrit can be translated into your own language. The seed letters cannot be translated.
16 petals are located vertically along calves and thighs (four in each). They are the 16 days of lunar calendar.
Invoke the sixteen petal lotus in the Śrī Cakra with aim klīm sauḥ mahā tripurasundarī ātmānam rakśa rakśa. This lotus represents the
flow of time through the lunar calendar. Rakśa= protection; It means you have to be protected every day at all times. So you say, aim klīm
sauḥ through the creative, protective and phases you have to be protected. Mahātripurasundarī: mahā means the great, belonging to the
cosmos. If you take mahā and reverse the letters, it becomes aham= I. Aham relates to the inside and mahā relates to the outside of our
bodies, mind and intellect. Tripura is the three cities the waking, dreaming and sleeping states. Sundarī= the most beautiful in all these states,
relating to the cosmos. Ātma, the notion of the ego confined to this body, rakśa, rakśa (may Sundarī) protect me, protect me throughout all
the sixteen days. The sixteen petal lotus is identified with protection.
4.17.4 8-Petalled Enclosure - Mūlādhārā
Then you move to the eight petal lotus where your experiences begin. You have already moved beyond the seven lokas (worlds) below. You
have moved into the eighth world. That is the Mūlādhārā cakra. That is the eight petal lotus (in the Śrī Yantrā).
8 petals are the base of spine, called Mūlādhārā. They are the 8 forms of abundance.
Hrīm Klīm Sauḥ. Previously we used aim klīm sauḥ. Here we are saying Hrīm. Hrīm can exist in three different forms. The first relates
to creation, the second relates to nourishment, the third relates to the annihilation. Here all the three forms are included in the Earth. You are
born out of the earth; you are fed by the things that grow out of the earth; and you are reabsorbed into the Earth.
Hrīm is your mother the earth.
Klīm is the nourishment, coming from Her and
Sauḥ is the reabsorption into that.
This is the nature of Hrīm Klīm Sauḥ and the Mūlādhārā Cakra. The fear comes when you think you are separate from the earth. Your
nourishment, your life relies on seeking things from the earth. The earth does give you that nourishment. Your fears are associated with your
separation from your mother. You have lost your connection with your mother, with the earth, and you have to re-establish your connection
with the earth from which you are born.
When you say Hrīm, Klīm Sauḥ, Hrīm is placed in your Mūlādhārā cakra. You must know very well these cakras and where these cakras
are located in your body. Creation and physical manifestations occur in the womb, propelled by the ejaculator sphincter muscles. These are
the locations of Mūlādhārā in female and male.
4.17.5 14-Cornered Enclosure - Svādhiṣṭhāna
The Svādhiṣṭhāna cakra is the base in the penis and the vulva in the female. Again they are at the same place; the sensations are also
similar. Here you see aim klīm sauḥ is the repeating pattern, and you are adding letters to it "h", "s", and "r".
In the Svādhiṣṭhāna cakra the energization is through the fire. The fire is symbolized by lust, the drive behind procreativity, desire. That is
what causes the erection of the penis in the male, the clitoris and the nipples in the female. Desire is symbolized by "ha". The desire for the
cosmic union, called the liṅga of Śivā. "ha" coupled with "aim, klīm and sauḥ". That is why you say haim, hklīm, hsauḥfor the
Svādhiṣṭhāna cakra. Desire is the power called Kuṇḍalinī, the desire for creativity, through an orgasmic release from the bondage to
earth. It does happen in Sex, but it is short lived; this is a limitation. Permanent release from all tensions is the aspiration of the Kuṇḍalinī.
The Svādhiṣṭhāna cakra in the Śrī Yantrā is the fourteen cornered figure.
"haim" is placed inside you - at your Svādhiṣṭhāna,
"hklīm" on the fourteen cornered figure and
"hsauḥ" on the Devī's Svādhiṣṭhāna cakra (vulva/base of penis).
This cakra can be that of a person being worshipped, or of the cosmos.
(Lalitā Sahasranāmam says Devī is Bhagārādhyā = worshipped in the vulva as the universal mother).
The Svādhiṣṭhāna cakra of the cosmos is waters: for example, lakes, rivers, oceans, rivers of life.
4.17.6 10-Cornered Enclosure - Maṇipūra
10 outer triangles are the navel of Devī, where the Sun is located in Her Maṇipūra. In the maṇipūra cakra the sounds "ha" and "sa" are
joined together - hsaim, hsklīm, hssauḥ. Here in the union between the Śivā and Śakti, Śivā is in yoga. He is not emitting the seed, and the
desire is powerful to make the liṅga is erect that it becomes vertical touching the navel. That is where the seat of the fire is supposed to be.
The seat of fire is the outer ten corners that relates to the individual. The inner ten corners relate to the cosmos. So hsaim, hsklīm, hssauḥ
are related to the individual. Before you go on to the cosmic figure you have to go through this link.
These four centers, mūlādhārā, svādhiṣṭhāna, maṇipūraand anāhatā are known as the placement of Four Seats, caturāsana nyāsa. To
remind ourselves, nyāsa means paying attention to your body. Holding the mind in a place or keeping your awareness fixed is called nyāsa.
1. The first seat is called Devī ātma āsanāya namaḥ. Devī is residing in the mūlādhārā cakra, and I am residing in the mūlādhārā cakra.
2. The second seat is the Śrī Cakrāsanaya namaḥ. I am in the sex center and so is Devī in the sex center. When I am in the
Svādhiṣṭhāna cakra, Devī is in the Svādhiṣṭhāna cakra. When I am looking for sensations, so is Devī looking for sensations.
3. The third seat is the seat of power, called Sarva mantrāsanāya namaḥ. When you stand by your values with discipline and you are
prepared to sacrifice your life to do that, then you gain power and you are in the maṇipūra cakra. The ball of fire is located in the maṇipūra
cakra.
4. The fourth seat – Please refer to the anāhatā Cakra on the next page.
The fire exists as desire, lust, digestive fire, external fire, wherever you find fire. It is not just at the navel. It is there at the cooking gas flame,
in the thermal power plants, in the volcanoes, in the bowels of the earth. It is all over. In the cosmic aspect, wherever fire is found, it is part of
the Maṇipūra cakra. That is related to power.
The mantra is Sarva mantrāsanāya namaḥ that which brings all the mantras to you. With the mantras we say "svāhā" and offer them into
the fire. The seat of all the mantras is fire. This is a very interesting statement. Why is it that people have lost contact with the spiritual world
today? Because they are not doing the fire rituals daily. Fire is a beautiful thing. The way it can dance, you cannot dance. It is a beautiful
sight. When you are constantly looking at its dance, it invokes that dance in you, the Kuṇḍalinī, the power to know beyond, in you. This brings
all the mantras to you and into your memory. This is why fire is called sarva mantra asanā.
4.17.7 10-Cornered Enclosure - Anāhatā
10 inner triangles are the Heart of Devī, the breath of life nourished and protected by Her milk in Her Anāhatā cakra.
The heart center is the inner ten corners, and it is surrounded by a twelve petal lotus. The mantra is Hrīm Klīm Blēm Sādhya
Siddhāsanāya namaḥ. Sādhya is what is to be attained. Siddha is what is attained already.
This is the fourth seat where you have partly attained and partly you have got to attain. The part you have attained already is the control
over yourself. You have controlled all your passions, and you begin to be nonjudgmental, love others unconditionally. That is the part you have
attained. The part to be attained is the fulfilment in cosmicization of this unconditional love and non-judgement. You have to attain these
attributes in an unlimited sense. Thus the heart center is a mixture of attainment and attempting to attain love of all nature, good and bad
included (non-judging witness).
4.17.8 8-Cornered Enclosure – Viśuddhi
aim hṛdayāya namaḥ - Your hŕdaya (heart) is the wind, life breath itself.
klīm śirasē svāhā (the head) is now the outreach of space. Your brain is mapped into the cosmos.
sauḥ śikhāyai vaṣaṭ - śikhā is an extension from head with thousands of individual hairs connecting each to a different world.
sauḥ kavacāya hum - kavacā is protective shield. Hum is called kūrca bīja (male, śivā), representing pushing breath down creating an
upward rising of life force from base of spine, called kuṇḍalinī. Protect your greatness with hum.
klīm nētratrayāya vauṣaṭ - Netra trayā means three eyes. Devī looks into past, present and future with Her left, middle and right eyes
respectively. Ability to look at time like we can look at space is special to Devī. Hence vauṣaṭ, the female form of vaṣaṭ is used.
aim astrāya phaṭ - phat is the sound of explosion when kuṇḍalinī pierces its way through the crown breaking the skull open. There is a
blood stain on top of the head when this happens. Very few people have survived such opening; an example being Vasiṣṭha Kāvyakānta
Gaṇapati Muni blessed by Bhagavān Śrī Ramaṇa Maharṣi.
We have gone over six cakras of the Śrī Cakra already. The other three are the eight corners, the triangle
and the point. They all relate to the laya, the loss of your individuality totally and you’re merging into the
cosmos.
Merging with the cosmos begins with your expansion of consciousness beyond your body, beyond your
love, beyond your attachments. That is why once you have reached the Viśuddhi cakra, you will not come
back. But if you are in the heart center and then you die, you are likely to return because of your
attachment to the people and the good deeds that are yet to be done. However much we say we are
unattached, we are attached to goodness. This is love, but it is still a bondage. You must transcend this
love to get to the universal self. This is where the Vairāgya (detachment) starts manifesting.
When your attachment for the universal manifests, your attachment for the local becomes insignificant.
This expansion process is to be attained through your understanding of the nature of Sarasvatī. It is
through knowledge alone that we can attain to mokṣa. It is Sarasvatī who takes you over from the
Viśuddhi and Ājñā cakras.
8 cornered enclosure:
The eight forms of Sarasvatī are none other than the eight groups of the Sanskrit letters – groups of bijas
starting with:
1. am…
2. kam…
3. cam…
4. ṭam…
5. tam…
6. pam…
7. yam…
8. śam…
These are the śaktis - vaśinī, kāmēśvarī etc. in the 8 corner enclosure. You can think of them as cosmic
resources for matter forming out of interacting time and space.
The trapezium above the central triangle and eight corners of Śrī Cakra has three lines containing three
guru maṇḍalas:
Top line has 7 mānava,
Middle 4 siddha and
Bottom of 8 divya gurus. Closest to central triangle are divya gurus. They are controlling eight
forms of sārasvatīs (flows) in the aṣṭakoṇa.
Note:
- In Khaḍga Māla, there are 9 pairs of gurus.
- In other standard Śrī Vidyā texts, there are 24 gurus (5 divya gurus, 10 siddha gurus and 9 mānava gurus).
- Whereas, in Paraśurāma Kalpa Sūtrā there are 19 gurus specified in the Navāvaraṇa Pūjā. Muni (saptarṣi 7), Veda (vedas 4), Vasu
(vasus 8) - saṃkhyā for the 3 lines of gurus.
Khaḍga Māla has a wider range: the bālā (child - sarasvatī), sundarī (middle aged lakṣmī) and vṛddha (old, crone kālī). It need not
conform the enumeration of only one aspect of sundarī. In daśa mahāvidyā, She is sundarī, seed letter klīm.
This book follows the Paraśurāma Kalpa Sūtrā Vidhiḥ.
Vāgdēvatā Nyāsa- Next comes the Vāgdēvatā Nyāsa, the eight forms of Sarasvatī. They are called Vaśinī, Kāmēśvarī, Mōdinī, Vimalā,
Aruṇā, Jayinī, Sarvēśvarī, and Kaulinī. This is the Viśuddhi cakra with the sixteen petal lotus in the neck. The sixteen petal lotus (the
second cakra of Śrī Cakra) was associated with time earlier. But now in Viśuddhi, association is with space communications.
Her body is made up of vibrations expressed as groups of Sanskrit alphabets, located at the uvula hanging from the palate in the mouth.
Pañcadaśī Nyāsa
Aim hrīm śrīm kam namaḥ- (head)
Aim hrīm śrīm ēm namaḥ- (genital)
Aim hrīm śrīm īm namaḥ- (heart)
Aim hrīm śrīm lam namaḥ- (right eye)
Aim hrīm śrīm hrīm namaḥ- (left eye)
Aim hrīm śrīm ham namaḥ- (third eye)
Aim hrīm śrīm sam namaḥ- (right ear)
Aim hrīm śrīm kam namaḥ- (left ear)
Aim hrīm śrīm ham namaḥ- (mouth)
Aim hrīm śrīm lam namaḥ- (right arm)
Aim hrīm śrīm hrīm namaḥ- (left arm)
Aim hrīm śrīm sam namaḥ- (back)
Aim hrīm śrīm kam namaḥ- (right knee)
Aim hrīm śrīm lam namaḥ- (left knee)
Aim hrīm śrīm hrīm namaḥ – (navel)
The above is the nyāsa for Pañcadaśī in the body. When you are doing
the nyāsa in your body, (bālā, vaśinyādi, Pañcadaśī nyāsas for
example), Devī is also visualized or seen to be doing the same nyāsa. If
the Devī is a living person receiving worship sitting in front of you, then she will just follow the nyāsas
you are doing.
Worship the aṅgadevatās with kuṅkumam or sandal paste. Imagine you are also worshipping yours and Devī's bodies as you do this nyāsam.
On top of this is a base and a pot with water. Into this water we are invoking the limbs of the Goddess.
When you do the aṅgadevatā nyāsa you say,
- "ka ē ī la hrīm hṛdayāya namaḥ" (the heart) and touch the agni koṇa the southeastern corner of the square;
- "ha sa ka ha la hrīm śirasē svāhā" (the head) and touch the īsāna koṇa the northeastern corner of the square;
- "sa ka la hrīm śikhāyai vaṣaṭ"(the crown of head) and touch the asura koṇa the southwestern corner;
- "ka ē ī la hrīm kavacāya hum"(the arms) and touch the vāyu koṇa the northwestern corner of square;
- "ha sa ka ha la hrīm nētratrayāya vauṣaṭ" (the third eye) and touch the center (madhye);
- "sa ka la hrīm astrāya phaṭ" (circle the head in front, right, back and left, corresponding to the four cardinal directions) and
- touch top side, right side middle, bottom side middle, left side middle and say bhūrbhuvassuvarom iti digbandhaḥ.
- Then you worship the central part of the triangle saying "aim hrīm śrīm ka ē ī la hrīm ha sa ka ha la hrīm sa ka la hrīm namaḥ". You
touch first the tip of the triangle at the bottom, then the left side corner, then the right, going clockwise. This completes the preparation of the
Sāmānyārghyā.
Sāmānyārghyā maṇḍala is to be drawn starting from the square moving inwards to the triangle whereas, the Viśēṣārghyā in the
opposite direction, starting from the Bindu moving outwards to the square. Drawing the maṇḍala is consistent with its worship
i.e. in Sāmānyārghyā when you worship the diagram, you are moving inwards in the diagram (cosmic awareness) whereas, in
Viśēṣārghyā (in the following section), you are moving outward (individual awareness).
The triangle in the Sāmānyārghyā and Viśēṣārghyā maṇḍala is mapped in a clockwise direction whereas, the inner triangle of the Śrī Cakra is
mapped in an anti-clockwise direction. The interpretation by the author is the sāmānya refers to the male breast, it is dakṣiṇāvarta, and
viśeṣa refers to female breast, it is vāmāvarta. Inside inner circle of the Śrī Yantra, it is She, vāmāvarta (anti clockwise) only. It is well
known that our universe (represented by all that is inside the circle) is left handed.
Make the diagram shown above to your left with pure water.
Caturātmakam (square)
Vṛtta (outer circle)
Ṣatkōṇa (Śivā-Śakti triangles)
Trikoṇa (inner triangle)
Maṇḍalam Vilikhya (this is a maṇḍala)
Offer a flower. Keep a conch (a right-handed spiral) with its base on the diagram. Fill it with water and
put a drop of milk in it. Imagine that this pattern is transferred up into the water and worship the aṅga
devatās with sandal paste as follows (with reference to the numbers in the diagram):
1. Aim hrīm śrīm ka ē ī la hrīm hṛdayāya namaḥ (heart)
2. Aim hrīm śrīm ha sa ka ha la hrīm śirasē svāhā (head)
3. Aim hrīm śrīm sa ka la hrīm śikhāyai vaṣaṭ (crown)
4. Aim hrīm śrīm ka ē ī la hrīm kavacāya hum (shoulders / armor)
5. Aim hrīm śrīm ha sa ka ha la hrīm nētratrayāya vauṣaṭ (three eyes)
6. Aim hrīm śrīm sa ka la hrīm astrāya phaṭ (weapons)
Remember that the nyāsam is being done both in your and Devī’s bodies along with that in the diagram.
Next offer flowers and turmeric rice into the water,saying
7. Aim hrīm śrīm ka ē ī la hrīm ha sa ka ha la hrīm sa ka la hrīm namaḥ
Pick up the flower and sprinkle water on yourself and the materials for pūjā. Put a drop of it into the
sandalwood paste.
4.20 Viśēṣārghyā
(This Sanskrit symbol is the fourth letter; Jāgrat, Svapna, Suṣupti and Turīya=Samādhi. The fish is the visible life form in the ocean. Ocean is
the svàdhiśthāna of Devī. So, the life coming from Devī’s svàdhiśthāna is denoted by the matsya mudrā).
Look at your own and Devī’s face, breasts and yonī, offer sandal paste at the centre with Pañcadaśī
mantra.
1. Aim hrīm śrīm ka ē ī la hrīm ha sa ka ha la hrīm sa ka la hrīm namaḥ
Offer sandal paste at the three corners of the central triangle with the three parts of the Pañcadaśī. Refer to
the diagram for the positions.
2. Aim hrīm śrīm ka ē ī la hrīm namaḥ(face)
3. Aim hrīm śrīm ha sa ka ha la hrīm namaḥ(breasts)
4. Aim hrīm śrīm sa ka la hrīm namaḥ (yonī)
Offer pūjā to the six triangles of the hexagon with the aṅgadevatā mantras:
5. Aim hrīm śrīm ka ē ī la hrīm hṛdayāya namaḥ
6. Aim hrīm śrīm ha sa ka ha la hrīm śirasē svāhā
7. Aim hrīm śrīm sa ka la hrīm śikhāyai vaṣaṭ
8. Aim hrīm śrīm ka ē ī la hrīm kavacāya hum
9. Aim hrīm śrīm ha sa ka ha la hrīm nētratrayāya vauṣaṭ
10. Aim hrīm śrīm sa ka la hrīm astrāya phaṭ
Remember again, that Devī is doing the nyāsa along with you.
The Śrī Vidyā upāsanā means that you realize the truth of the statement that what you see is yourself. You are seeing yourself, your body,
your mind, your thoughts all these are yours. Not only that, you are also seeing all the articles of worship, the Yantrā and the Devī all these are
also yourself.
To establish the reality and the truth of this in an integral way, imagine that you are hovering like an angel over yourself and you are looking
down where you are sitting. This is your nose. Devī is sitting here. The articles of pūjā are there. Here is the Śrī Cakra which is the link
between the two of you. On the left side and on the right-hand side you are going to keep what is called Sāmānyārghyā and Viśēṣārghyā.
There is going to be a maṇḍala for the ordinary pot (Sāmānyārghyā) and one for the Viśēṣārghyā, the nectar in which all the kalās are
invoked. You have to become a part of the entire structure. This is Her face, you are Her breasts and this is Her foot and this is Her yonī and
this is Her navel. You are sitting on Her yonī, the ādhāra Śakti - Her mūlādhārā cakra. You are yourself the svādhiśthāna. The
Sāmānyārghyā and Viśēṣārghyā are the right and left breasts of Devī. This whole structure is Ardhanārīśvara, the right breast corresponds
with Śivā and that is flat, and the left breast is full, it is the Viśēṣārghyām, the Devī.
The Devī is the Icchā Śakti, the Śrī Cakra and the Sāmānyārghyā and Viśēṣārghyā are in the Jñāna Śakti sthāna and you and the
Mūlādhārā are the Kriyā Śakti sthāna. As we mentioned, in the Vajra Pañjara nyāsa, we are placing the three bījas, one in yourself, one in
the connecting link of the Śrī Cakra and one in the Devī, in the Kriyā, Jñāna and Icchā Śakti sthānas. You are exchanging the Icchā and Kriyā
Śaktis and the connection is the Jñāna. It is like a point which is a pinhole camera, where what you see is being reflected. Your right side is
Her left side and your left is Her right side. You are making yourself, the pūjā articles, the nectar and the Devī one integrated structure through
this process of ritual.
4.21 Ten (10) Kalās of Fire
Place the base of the Viśēṣārghyā vessel on the diagram, saying the following mantra:
Aim hrīm śrīm aim agni maṇḍalāya dharmaprada daśa kalātmanē śrī mahātripurasundaryāḥ
viśēṣārghyā pātra ādhāraya namaḥ
Aim hrīm śrīm agnim dūtam vṛṇīmahe hōtāram viśvavēdasam asya yajñasya sukratum rām rīm rūm
raim raum raḥ ramala varayūm agni maṇḍalāya namaḥ
From the mūlādhārā and svādhiśthāna, the fire which starts as lust and goes up to the ājñā.
At this point it manifests as flowing time, past, present and future.
The past is the right eye, the present is the 3rd eye and the future is the left eye.
The right eye is the eye of Śivā, he is called bhūtanātha the lord of the past.
The left eye is the eye of the Devī. Devī is the creatrix, the mother, she brings the future into the present.
Meditate upon a bright fire burning fiercely at the mūlādhārā cakra of Devī with its fiery tips shooting
right up to Her 3 eyes.
Invoke the 10 kalās of fire into the base, imagining it to be a homa kuṇḍam. The 10 kalās of fire are
located as follows:
The first three are in the petals pointed to by the letters yam, ram, lam in the svādhiśthāna cakra.
The next four occur in the 4 petals of the mūlādhārā cakra pointed to by the letters vam, śam, ṣam.
The remaining three are located in the 3 eyes, the ājñā cakra.
The name of the kalā indicates the nature of the fire. Visualize the seed letters as having properties of fire
described coming from locations indicated by them, and merging into the base.
Hold the vessel for Viśēṣārghyā in your hand and say the mantra imagining it to be the sun itself.
Aim hrīm śrīm klīm sūrya maṇḍalāya dvādaśa kalātmanē viśēṣārghyā pātra ādhāraya namaḥ
Aim hrīm śrīm āsatyēna rajasā vartamānō nivēśayan amṛtam martyamca hiraṇyayēna savitā rathēnā
dēvōyāti bhuvanā vipaśyan hrām hrīm hrūm hraim hraum hraḥ, hrmalavarayūm sūrya maṇḍalāya
namaḥ
The meaning of the above mantra is: With the glow of truth, the god of Sun, the force of life, is coming in
the sky, distributing his energy to the transcendent nectarine nature and to the decaying physical nature. He
is looking at all the creation with rays shooting out from his eye. Hrīm is his Śakti, the power to create an
individual life form.
Invoke the 12 rays of the sun with the 12 mantras given below into the Viśēṣārghyā pātra by placing a dot
of sandal paste along the edge of the vessel. Each mantra has two initial seed letters.
The first one points to a petal in the anāhata cakra.
The second one points to a petal in the maṇipūra cakra (for 10 of the kalās), and in the
svādhiśthāna cakra (for the first 2 rays).
1. Aim hrīm śrīm kam bham tapinyai namaḥ– hot (sun coming from heart through the vagina into the
Viśēṣārghyā)
2. Aim hrīm śrīm kham bam tāpinyai namaḥ– burning hot (right nipple and through the vagina, the
burning desire coming to the vagina)
3. Aim hrīm śrīm gam pham dhūmrāyai namaḥ - smoky
4. Aim hrīm śrīm gham pam marīcyai namaḥ- rays
5. Aim hrīm śrīm ṅam nam jvālinyai namaḥ– fiercely glowing
6. Aim hrīm śrīm cam dham rucyai namaḥ- bright
7. Aim hrīm śrīm cham dam suṣumnāyai namaḥ- lightning
8. Aim hrīm śrīm jam tham bhōgadāyai namaḥ- enjoying
9. Aim hrīm śrīm jham tam viśvāyai namaḥ- cosmic
10. Aim hrīm śrīm ñam ṇam bōdhinyai namaḥ- awakening
11. Aim hrīm śrīm ṭam ḍham dhārinyai namaḥ- remembering
12. Aim hrīm śrīm ṭham ḍam kṣamāyai namaḥ - forgiving
4.23 Sixteen (16) Kalās of Moon
Pour milk into the vessel of Viśēṣārghyā with the following mantra:
Aim hrīm śrīm sauḥ sōma maṇḍalāya ṣōdaśa kalātmanē viśēṣārghyāmṛtāya namaḥ
Aim hrīm śrīm āpyāyasva samētutē viśvataḥ sōmavṛṣṇiyam bhavā vājasya sangathē sām sīm sūm saim
saum saḥ samalavarayūm sōma maṇḍalāya namaḥ
The full moon is spreading the body of the whole world with his cool moonlight. May this milk flow over
your body the same way, spreading happiness all over your body; and cool your passion. Imagine that five
nectars are flowing from the moon, the pool of nectar (the semen) into the vessel. The five nectars are
milk, curd, ghee, honey and fruit juices. Mix all ingredients which give flavour to the viśēṣārghyām and
invoke the 16 digits of the moon into the viśēṣārghyām by pouring honey in a circle into it. These digits of
the moon are in the viśuddhi cakra of Devī. (Honey is the essence of flowers. Flowering is usually
associated with menstruation. So honey can also be considered as the menstrual fluid.)
The three celestial lights of Fire, Sun and the Moon represent the three channels of nervous currents
called suśumṇā, piṅgalā and idā. Among them, they exhaust all the letters of the Sanskrit alphabet, except
the letter 'ma'. The letter 'ma' means contact. Since every act of worship involves contact, it is implied in
every kalā whether it be of fire, sun or moon. Lalitā Devī is fond of the letter 'ma', because 'ma' also
means mother.
In the Viśēṣārghyā, draw a triangle consisting of three groups of 16 letters of the Sanskrit alphabet. The
first 16 form the line slanting towards your right; the second sixteen is the horizontal line; and the third
sixteen is the line slanting to your left.
At the three corners, write the seed letters ha, la, kṣa. In the centre of this triangle of letters, write the
kāma kalā, consisting of a circle for the face, two circles for the breasts and a small triangle for the yonī
of Devī. The first circle is nirguṇa, the letter 'a', the second pair of circles is saguṇa – the letter 'ha'. The
trischool represents the contact (m) between the saguṇa and nirguṇa manifesting saguṇa from nirguṇa.
This combination of letters 'a', 'ha' and 'm' becomes 'aham' meaning I. This is called kāma kalā because
it symbolizes the word 'ahamsaḥ', meaning 'I am that'. The letter 'a' stands for lack of any description,
śūnyā, or circle. The letter 'ha' stands for visarga, two circles. The letter 'm' represents the contact, the
sound source, the womb of Devī. This picture is a description of Devī Herself.
Worship the parts of kāma kalā as follows:
Aim hrīm śrīm ka ē ī la hrīm namaḥ (worship the Bindu, face)
Aim hrīm śrīm ha sa ka ha la hrīm namaḥ (breasts)
Aim hrīm śrīm sa ka la hrīm namaḥ (yonī triangle)
With the same mantras as above, worship the front, right and left corners of the triangle:
Aim hrīm śrīm ka ē ī la hrīm namaḥ front corner
Aim hrīm śrīm ha sa ka ha la hrīm namaḥ right corner
Aim hrīm śrīm sa ka la hrīm namaḥ left corner
Touching this triangle, draw a hexagon and a circle in the Viśēṣārghyā while saying the amṛta jaya
mantra "Ōm Haum Jumsaḥ".
Worship the six triangles of the hexagon, starting from the corner towards you and going clockwise with
the aṅga devatā mantras given below:
1. Aim hrīm śrīm ka ē ī la hrīm hṛdayāya namaḥ Hṛdaya Śakti Śrī
pādukām pūjayāmi tarpayāmi namaḥ (heart)
2. Aim hrīm śrīm ha sa ka ha la hrīm śirasē svāhā Śira Śakti Śrī
pādukām pūjayāmi tarpayāmi namaḥ (head)
3. Aim hrīm śrīm sa ka la hrīm śikhāyai vaṣaṭ Śikha Śakti Śrī
pādukām pūjayāmi tarpayāmi namaḥ (moon)
4. Aim hrīm śrīm ka ē ī la hrīm kavacāya hum Kavaca Śakti Śrī
pādukām pūjayāmi tarpayāmi namaḥ (shoulders)
5. Aim hrīm śrīm ha sa ka ha la hrīm nētratrayāya vauṣaṭ Netra
Śakti Śrī pādukām pūjayāmi tarpayāmi namaḥ (eyes)
6. Aim hrīm śrīm sa ka la hrīm astrāya phaṭ Astra Śakti Śrī pādukām pūjayāmi tarpayāmi namaḥ
(weapons)
In the centre, worship Devī in the seven cakrās seven times with Pañcadaśī given below:
Aim hrīm śrīm ka ē ī la hrīm ha sa ka ha la hrīm sa ka la hrīm namaḥ earth (mūlādhārā)
Aim hrīm śrīm ka ē ī la hrīm ha sa ka ha la hrīm sa ka la hrīm namaḥ ocean (svādhiśthāna)
Aim hrīm śrīm ka ē ī la hrīm ha sa ka ha la hrīm sa ka la hrīm namaḥ fire (maṇipūra)
Aim hrīm śrīm ka ē ī la hrīm ha sa ka ha la hrīm sa ka la hrīm namaḥ air (anāhatā)
Aim hrīm śrīm ka ē ī la hrīm ha sa ka ha la hrīm sa ka la hrīm namaḥ space (viśuddhi)
Aim hrīm śrīm ka ē ī la hrīm ha sa ka ha la hrīm sa ka la hrīm namaḥ mind (ājñā)
Aim hrīm śrīm ka ē ī la hrīm ha sa ka ha la hrīm sa ka la hrīm namaḥ super mind (sahasrāra)
Offer gandham (scent), akśatās (turmeric rice), puṣpam (flowers), and dūpam (lights) to Śrī Sudhā
Devī, the lady carrying the bowl of nectar (a name given to Lakṣmī, born out of the clockwise and
anticlockwise rotation of Meru Parvatam in the ocean).
While waving the lights, you may recite the sapta śloki Durgā, a condensation of the 700 stanzas of
Durgā saptaśati.
Ahamsaḥ and Aṅgadevatā Pūjās of Śrī Sudhā Devī
We have invoked the kalās of the sun, the fire, and the moon and we have created this lunar eclipse time artificially here. Now we
have to invoke in the viśēṣārghyā the 51 letters of the Sanskrit alphabet.
We draw a triangle imagining that it has been written with these letters.
- From the bottom point you go upward with the vowels: am ām im īm um ūm ṛm ṝm ḷm ḹm ēm aim ōm aum aḥ aḥm.
- Then there are three groups of five and one consonants: kam kham gam gham ṅam, cam cham jam jham ñam, ṭam ṭham ḍam ḍham
ṇam, tam
- Then starting with: tham dam dham nam, pam pham bam bham mam, yam ram lam vam, śam ṣam sam.
- Then ham lam kṣam the three eyes in the three corners of the triangle.
You are going anticlockwise in the ājñā cakra. Having done that you invoke the kāmakalā into the milk.
The face is represented by a circle, the heart center by two circles, and the yonī by a triangle. This is called the Kāma Kalā. This has
several meanings.
- The face is a circle which represents śūnya nothing. Negation of everything. This is am.
- ha is the visarga. Sarga means creation; visarga means extreme creativity. This is represented by the two circles, the two breasts. In
the agni kalāvāhana we have omitted one letter. We omitted "m". It stands for contact. Contact is important for Devī that it is
incorporated in all these bīja letters. We don't say "a"; we say "am". We don't have to say the "m" separately.
- The ma is represented by the yonī, the contact between Śivā and Śakti. Aham.
When you are coming down from the head to the bottom you say aham I am.
When you go up you say mahā. I am the cosmos. The aham means I am the Devī.
Ahamsaḥ. I am the Devī, the entire cosmos. When you say ahamsaḥ, I am the Devī in the Kāma Kalā you are equating the process of
coming down and going up. There is no distinction.
With the incoming breaths you are working with the "I". With the outgoing breaths you can go through different surfaces, different
individuals or objects. The breath goes in a circular process, never repeating the same cycle. With the incoming breath you are "I am
the Devī, the universe"; with the outgoing breaths you go through all of the living beings one by one. It is the individual experience
and the cosmic experience. What is the difference? Individual experience is the serialization of the cosmic experience. The cosmic
experience is the unitive experiences of the individual experience. That means in the individual experience you have to go through
serially one by one all the life forms in this world at all times in the world; but in the cosmic experience you experience the life forms
of all the living beings at the same time and in one lifetime you have finished the whole thing.
Between these two the time factor is much more in the individual experience. In the cosmic experience you can experience mokṣa
much faster. It is the viśvarūpa darśanam of the Bhagavadgītā. Kṛṣṇa shows Arjuna his cosmic form but still the time is flowing. You
see through the ājñā cakra, so the time and distinctions are still there, each living being flowing from the mouth of Kṛṣṇa. It is not a
complete experience. It is a partial experience. It is close to the sahasrāra, but it is not the sahasrāra. The Sahasrāra cannot be
described.
You draw the Kāma kalā into the milk of the viśēṣārghyā; the face saying "a" the breasts saying "ham" and the yonī saying "saḥ".
The face is ka ē ī la hrīm; the breasts are ha sa ka ha la hrīmand the yonī is sa ka la hrīm. The ājñā center triangle that we have
drawn with all the letters also includes all the other cakras as well. Then we draw a hexagon surrounding this triangle and a circle
inside it while saying the amṛta jaya mantra "ōm haum jumsaḥ". The hexagon represents the union between Śivā and Śakti and the
circle inside it is the bindu which comes out of this union. Then we worship the Devī here in the viśēṣārghyā with the aṅgadevatā
nyāsa.
We invoke the different cakras into the milk. We identify that the Devī's mūlādhārā cakra representing all the earth and the solid state
is invoked into the viśēṣārghyā maṇḍala. The solid state is the square. We invoke all the oceans and liquids into the svādhiṣṭhāna
cakra, the six sided star. We invoke the fire in the maṇipūra, the air in the anāhatā, the praṇa and space into the viśuddhi into the
maṇḍala's circle.
4.25 Sapta śloki Durgā - a condensation of the 700 stanzas of Durgā saptaśati
Sprinkle the viśēṣārghyām on yourself, on Devī and all the people around and on all the materials of
pūjā.
Invocation of the Jīva Kalās - the 99 Kalās of the Celestial Lights Once again we invoke the ten kalās of fire, the twelve kalās of the
sun and the sixteen kalās of the moon as before, but this time in the icon or the female.
Invoke the 10 kalās of fire, 12 kalās of sun and 16 kalās of moon listed above.
1. Aim hrīm śrīm kam bham tapinyai namaḥ – hot (sun coming from heart through the vagina
into the Viśēṣārghyā)
2. Aim hrīm śrīm kham bam tāpinyai namaḥ– burning hot (right nipple and through the vagina,
the burning desire coming to the vagina)
3. Aim hrīm śrīm gam pham dhūmrāyai namaḥ - smoky
4. Aim hrīm śrīm gham pam marīcyai namaḥ- rays
5. Aim hrīm śrīm ṅam nam jvālinyai namaḥ– fiercely glowing
6. Aim hrīm śrīm cam dham rucyai namaḥ- bright
7. Aim hrīm śrīm cham dam suṣumnāyai namaḥ- lightning
8. Aim hrīm śrīm jam tham bhōgadāyai namaḥ- enjoying
9. Aim hrīm śrīm jham tam viśvāyai namaḥ- cosmic
10. Aim hrīm śrīm ñam ṇam bōdhinyai namaḥ- awakening
11. Aim hrīm śrīm ṭam ḍham dhārinyai namaḥ- remembering
12. Aim hrīm śrīm ṭham ḍam kṣamāyai namaḥ - forgiving
The Brahma Kalās This is the invocation of the ten kalās of Brahma, the creator in the Mūlādhārā cakra. The ten kalās are: sṛṣṭyai
(creation), ṛdhyai (growth), smṛtyai (memory), mēdhāyai (intelligence), kāntyai (glow), lakṣmyai (prosperity), dyutyai (sparkling),
sthirāyai (fixity), sthityai (firm placement), siddhyai (transcendent). The first 8 kalās go around the Mūlādhārā in a clockwise
direction. The ninth kalā (sthityai) goes inside the Mūlādhārā, the tenth kalā (siddhyai) goes up to the tip of the liṅgam or to the
outward edge of the cervix.
4.26.5 Viṣṇu kalās (10)
The Rudra Kalās The ten kalās of Rudra are the Sun located in the Maṇipūra Cakra. That is the thermonuclear fusion reaction
which is the brightness itself. That is why the cakra is called maṇipūra filled with jewels. Up to this point, you cannot see any lights.
But when you come to maṇipūra cakra you begin to see lights in your meditation. The Rudrā kalās are: tīkṣṇāyai (sharp), raudryai
(anger), bhayāyai (fear), nidrāyai (sleep), tandryai (coma), kṣudhāyai (hunger), krodhinyai (flames of anger), kriyāyai (active),
udgāryai (uplifting), mṛtyave (death).
4.26.7 Īśvara kalās (4)
1. Aim hrīm śrīm hagm saḥ śuciśad vasuḥ antarikṣasad hōtā vēdiṣad atithir durōṇasat | nŗṣad
varasadŗtaṣad vyōmaṣad abjā gōjā ṛtajā adrijā ṛtam bṛhat namaḥ ||
Brahma Mantra:
hagm saḥ śuciśad vasuḥ antarikṣasad hōtā vēdiṣad atithir durōṇasat nŗṣad varasadŗtaṣad vyōmaṣad abjā gōjā ṛtajā adrijā ṛtam
bṛhat namaḥ
hagm saḥ is an ancient archaic form; śuci means the sun; vasuḥ means the earth; antarikṣa means space; sad means the truth; hotā
is the one who offers the ghee into the fire; vedi is the homakuṇḍa; atithir is the guest who comes without an appointment; duroṇasat
nŗṣad varasad is the one who gives blessings; ŗtaṣad is the flowing truth; vyōmaṣad is the truth established in the sky; abjā is to one
who is born out of the waters; gōjā is born out of the indriyas the cognitive and active senses; ṛtajā is the one who is born out of the
nonflowing truth; adrijā is the mountain, the stability; ṛtam is the truth. They are explaining in some sense the creation process itself.
Probably if one uses this mantra and keeps repeating it one may get the perceptions about the creative process itself. It may have in it
the genetic codes.
1. Aim hrīm śrīm pratad viṣṇuḥ tavatē vīryāya mṛgōna bhīmaḥ kucarō giriṣthāḥ |
yasyōruṣu triṣu vikramaṇēṣu adhikṣiyanti bhuvanāni viśvā namaḥ ||
Viṣṇu Mantra
pratad viṣṇuḥ tavatē vīryāya mṛgōna bhīmaḥ kucarō giriṣthāḥ yasyōruṣu triṣu vikramaṇēṣu adhikṣiyanti bhuvanāni viśvā namaḥ.
"For your power, strength, even the lion cannot be ferocious enough. Of Viṣṇu, when the three eyes are expanded, they go beyond all
that we see or have seen". The lion is symbolic of the human ego and must be surrendered to the divine.
Viśvā is a technical term. What you are able to see in the waking state is called Viśvā. "Virat", "hiraṇya garbha" and "īśvarā" are
the three terms and the corresponding three terms are "viśvā", "taijasa" and "prajñā". These relate to experiences of an individual
in the waking state, dream state and sleeping state; "virat", "hiraṇya garbha" and "īśvarā" relate the cosmic experiences of the
cosmic being in the waking, dream and sleeping states. When we say "viśvā" we mean all the worlds seen by an individual that go
beyond those seen. They can only be perceived in the united vision, not the individual vision. What is the distinction between the
universal vision and the individual vision? For instance, I am seeing you as many people that is individual vision. But when I see
myself also through your eyes at the same time and see what you are seeing, it is the universal vision. This adhikṣiyanti bhuvanāni
viśvā namaḥ is all the worlds through the individual perceptions, it goes beyond that. Viṣṇu is the waters of life. They exist throughout
the cosmos. His characteristic is pervasiveness, expanding all over, growing beyond. That is why the yasyōruṣu triṣu vikramaṇēṣu the
three dimensions in space. As they expand, whatever is seen in the three dimensions by all the individuals, your knowledge exceeds
all these things. That is the essence of the Viṣṇu mantra.
4.26.11 Rudra Mantra (1)
Rudra Mantra
The mantra for Rudrā is tryambakam yajāmahē sugandhim puṣṭi vardhanam urvārukamiva bandhanān mṛtyōrmukṣīya māmṛtāt
namaḥ. Tryambakam the lord of the three mothers, Gauri, Lakṣmī and of Sarasvatī. Parameśvara is the lord of Mahātripurasundarī,
at all the three levels. They are all the same. You say "This is my hand and this is my eye". These are all your body. Pārvati is known
as the "sahodari" of Rama. If you identify Rama with "puruṣa" the "prakṛti" is the yonī, it is the Sahodari.
"Urvāruka" is a snake gourd. As it becomes ripe it falls off by itself. When one understands the tryambaka aspect of Śivā, not
confining oneself to the lower centers then He, Śivā nourishes you in all aspects, and like the snake gourd (that falls off the vine when
it is ripe), He takes you away from the "mrtyu", the death and gives you "amṛta" the nectar. This is actually the worship of the sun.
The entire Rudram is the worship of the sun, the one who attracts and gives light, the life-giving force. It goes beyond life itself.
1. Aim hrīm śrīm tad viṣṇōḥ paramam padam sadā paśyanti sūrayaḥ |
divīva cakṣurātatam | tadviprāsō vipanyavō jāgṛvāmsaḥ samindhatē |
viṣṇōryat paramam padam namaḥ ||
Sadāśiva Mantra
This is the mantra by which the cosmos is created. Space and time are being united. This is called the Garbhādhāna Mantra, which
means the act of consummation.
Viṣṇur yonīm kalpayatu- may Viṣṇu create the yonī, the source of life. Tvaṣtā rūpāṇi pigmśatu- May tvaṣtā, one of the aśvinī gods,
create the forms out of what is available. Āsiñcatu prajāpatir- prajāpati is a typical name for the erect male member. It is also a
name for the unit of time which the earth takes to orbit the sun. Āsiñcatu prajāpati - May that prajāpati fill you with his seed. Dhātā
garbham dadātu tē- May dhātā fertilize the egg inside of you. Garbham dhēhi sinīvāli- sinīvāli and Sarasvatī are the two gods our
awareness is associated with the ejaculatory sphincter muscles and the receptive forces controlling the movement of the sperm
towards the seed. Garbham dhēhi sarasvatī - Sarasvatī is the force which controls propelling the right sperm towards the seed.
Garbhantē aśvinau dēvāu - may the aśvinī devatās who are the creators of life, ādhattām puṣkarasrajāḥ namaḥ - May they put the
life into the female egg.
Kuntī was the mother of the Pāṇḍavas. She recited this garbhādhāna mantra keeping the idea of the various gods of the cakras and
of the ājñā cakra and she had six sons. First she worshipped the Ājñā cakra and she had Karṇa. Then she worshipped Yama in the
Mūlādhārā cakra and got Dharmarāja; then she worshipped the aśvinī devatās and got Nakula and Sahadevā; and she worshipped
Vāyu with this mantra and obtained Bhīmaḥ. She worshipped Tejas (Agni) at the Maṇipūra cakra and got Arjuna.
Amṛta Kalāvāhana
Now imagine that on the top of your head is the Ardhanārīśvara form of Śivā. The right
foot corresponds to Śivā and the left foot corresponds to Śakti. This form is the Guru and his feet are on the top of your head and the
nectar flows from the Guru's feet. One stream comes from the left foot, from Devī, one stream from the right foot, Śivā and one from
the middle. This is Hsaum and
Sahauḥ. Hsaum is the yoga aspect and Sahauḥ is the Sthiti and Siddhi aspects.
We invoke them with the mantra: akhaṇdaika rasānanda karē parasudhātmani svacchanda sphuraṇām ātra nidhēhi akula nāyikē
namaḥ. Akhaṇda means unbroken. Eka rasa is the one flow of ānanda. The unbroken flow of ānanda (bliss). Please give me this
unbroken flow of bliss - parasudhātmani the transcendental nectar. Svacchanda means independence. May it invoke independence
in me, atra nidhehi please place. There are two lotuses, one called the kulapadma and the other is the akula padma. The kulapadma
is the sahasrāra cakra of the lower seven worlds; the akula Padma is the sahasrāra cakra of the upper seven worlds. The lower
seven worlds' sahasrāra cakra is our Mūlādhārā cakra. The akula padma which is our sahasrāra cakra on the top of our head is
where Śivā resides. From Śivā's foot this transcendence flows down.
The next verse is akulasthāmṛta ākārē śuddha jñāna karē parē amṛtatvam nidhēhi asmin vastuni klinna rūpiṇi namaḥ. When the
Devī has been taken up to the sahasrāra cakra and there she is united with Śivā she also stays in the akula padma. "Akulasthāmṛta
ākāre". What is its nature? "Śuddha jñāna kare" - one who gives pure knowledge. "parē" - transcendence. "Amṛtatvam" -
immortality. "Nidhēhi" - please place; "asmin vastuni" - in this material which I am having here; "klinna rūpiṇi namaḥ" - the
nature of wetness.
Then from the flow of the union between Śivā and Śakti comes tadrūpiṇi ēkarasyatvam kṛtvāhi ētat svarūpiṇi bhūtvā parāmṛtākārā
mayī cit sphuraṇam kuru namaḥ. There is a Mahāvākya a great saying which states, "tat tvam asi". Tat means that, tvam is you, asi
are. You are all that you see. All that you see is called that. So "tadrūpiṇi" all that you see that is having forms. This is relating to the
flow from the akula padma. The other two verses related to the kula padma. Tadrūpiṇi ēkarasyatvam kṛtvāhi ētat svarūpiṇi bhūtvā
parāmṛtākārā mayī cit sphuraṇam kuru namaḥ. Even though these forms all look different, let me be able to see them as one single
flow. "ētat svarūpiṇi" that should become me; bhūtvā having become; parāmṛtākārā although I am seeing differences, let these
differences disappear; mayī in me; cit sphuraṇam the ability to see with my closed eyes; kuru namaḥ may you create with my closed
eyes the ability to see from my intuition, my inner knowledge. These are the flows coming from the union between Śivā and Śakti on
the top of the head and from the Śakti below.
4.26.16 Invocation of Amṛta Kalā (1)
1. Aim hrīm śrīm aim blūm jhmroum jum saḥ amṛte amṛtōdbhavē amṛtēśvari amṛta varśiṇi
amṛtam srāvaya srāvaya svāhā namaḥ
Worship the feet of your Guru with the Guru Mantra given earlier, 3 times on top of your head with
drops of viśēṣārghyām. Take a spoon of viśēṣārghyām and say the following mantra:
Aim hrīm śrīm
|| ārdram jvalati jyōti-rahamasmi |
jyōtir jvalati brahmāhamasmi |
yō ahamasmi –brahmāhamasmi |
ahamasmi – brahmāhamasmi –
ahamēvāham mām - juhōmi svāhā ||
So saying, the drop of viśēṣārghyā bindu is taken on the tongue. The drop referred above is the
smallest of the quantity to be taken. The meaning of this becomes especially important when strong
liquors are used instead of milk in rājasic and tāmasic upāsanās.
The Mahāvākya noted above is the 100th jīva kalā.
Taking the Viśēṣārghyām
The first mantram is the Guru Mantram that was explained at the beginning of the pūjā. Then you
have to remember the guru at this stage and you invoke the names of your Gurus; Śrī Sahasrākṣī
ambā rajarājeśvari parābhaṭtārikā sahita. We worship the feet of the guru Kalyānānanda Bhāratī
who is our guru's guru's guru. We worship the feet of datta guru Svaprakāśānandanātha our guru's
guru. We worship the feet of Śrī Amṛitānandanātha Sarasvatī our guru and his wife.
Until now we have invoked the 99 kalās. For the last 100th kalā, the taking of the nectar, you have to
take permission of the gurus to take this nectar. The mantra for taking the nectar is: ārdram jvalati
- the wetness which is oozing from the Svādhiṣṭhāna and Mūlādhārā cakras that shines and
becomes the fire. Jyōtirahamasmi - I become the light. When you are able to control and discipline
your sexual drives you are able to become the light. Jyōtir jvalati- when that light burns then it
becomes the transcendental light and you are able to say brahmāhamasmi that I am the Ultimate
paramātman; yōhamasmi whatever I am, whether I am in that impermanent state or that
transcendental state, yes brahmāhamasmi yes I am that Ultimate being. Ahamasmi I am that;
brahmāhamasmi you are repeating the statement again for emphasis. Ahameva I am indeed myself
aham mām I am taking me juhōmi - inside. The nectar contained in me is also me. That is Brahma.
I am also Brahma. I am taking Brahma inside. The identity is realized that everything that you see is
you. So saying, you give the nectar to Devī (and Guru), because you are no different than Devī and
you take it inside of you and you put it on the śrī cakra. Your identity is with all.
Thus ends the purification of the body and of the Śrī Cakram and of suvāsini. All those present will
partake of the viśēṣārghyām without letting drops of it fall on the ground. Neither the viśēṣārghyām
nor the sāmānyārghyam are to be moved till the subsequent stages to follow, namely: Lalitā
Kramam, Navāvaraṇa Pujā and Śakti Pūjā are completed.
Lalitā Kramam
This is the 2nd part of the pūjā. Having prepared the nectar with all
the jīva kalās and all the elements of the individual and the cosmos
into the nectar we are now going to invoke the Lalitā Devī with all
her attendants, with all the celestial beings, with all the life forces
in the world into whatever it is that we are worshipping. Initially
she resides in our hearts. We invoke the cosmos that is already in
our hearts into whatever it is we worship, for the sake of worship,
and at the end of the worship we take it back in to ourselves (this is
to emphasize that you are only worshipping the purified part of
you). This process is important in Lalitā Kramam.
Sometimes you have got to hurt. What is it that you have to hurt? Your fear you have got to hurt. You have
got to get rid of it. Your lust you have got to hurt, to get rid of it; your internal enemies you have got to kill.
That is what Devī does. She kills Mahiṣasura; a buffalo is to be offered as sacrifice to Her. What is this
Mahiṣa? Mahiṣa is the bull which represents blind, hurtful lust. Lust has to be transformed into something
higher. Lust means that the notion of the other is preserved and you want it badly, no matter what cost. You
want to grab and seek only for your pleasure, ignoring the other's sentiments or feelings. That is lust. This
has to be transformed into love. In lust there is no caring for the other's pleasure, as you would care for
your own pleasure. You are only interested in your pleasure. That has to be transformed. Transformation
means changing its nature. Transformation means killing its present nature, and giving birth to a new
nature.
However, love can not survive without lust. Let us understand this. The lotus flower is born in the mud
then grows in the water. Its flower comes out into the open, into air and looks to the light and blooms
when the sun comes out.
We are like the lotus. You are born in flesh. You can say, "I don't want this flesh, I want to throw it away",
and then you cut off the lotus from the stem. It is the lotus itself that will die. It is the fear, the lust, the
greed and the jealousy which are transformed into love. It is the demonic that have to be transformed into
the divine. But you cannot totally destroy the disorder. Order and disorder have to be in balance.
Ḥrccakrasthām
(Residing in the heart like a rising sun, red in colour)
antaḥ suśumṇā padmātavi bhedana kuśalām
(Able to pierce the lotuses easily with flashes of light along the axis of suśumṇā)
mohāndhakāra paripandhini samvidagnim
(The fire of knowledge dispelling delusion)
Śiva dīpa jyotim cidrūpiṇīm
(The light of auspicious consciousness, universal and unbounded)
ādi para samvidam prāṇarūpiṇīm paradevatām dhyātva
(The primordial intuited knowledge of the form of all life itself)
trikhaṇḍamudrāgarbhita kusumāñjalau (Into the flowers held in trikhaṇḍa mudrā of the colours of
white, red and yellow)
The mantra of invocation is: ḥrccakrasthām the one who is residing in the heart cakra; antaḥ inside; suśumṇā padmātavi bhedana
kuśalām the suśumṇā is the central channel of the kuṇḍalinī; padmātavi forest of lotuses; bhedana piercing through; kuśalām who is
very adept. "The one who is residing in the heart cakra who is very adept in piercing through the lotus stems which are the
Mūlādhārā, svādhiṣṭhāna and all the cakras". Mohāndhakāra illusion and darkness; paripandhini the space surrounding the
illusion and darkness; samvid to know intuitively; agnim the fire which knows intuitively how to dispel the darkness of delusion; śiva
dīpa jyotim the light emanating from the lamp called Śivā; cidrūpiṇīm - cid means caitanya awareness, the form of awareness; ādi
para samvidam intuitive knowledge of the Highest; prāṇarūpiṇīm whose nature is life force; paradevatām the transcendental
goddess; dhyātva having thought of her like this. Trikhaṇḍa mudrā garbhita kusumāñjalau: you make the trikhaṇḍa mudrā with
your hands which is the yonī mudrā with the fingers opened out.
Invoke all the light beings:
- Sarasvatī who is symbolized by holding a white flower in two fingers;
- Lakṣmī who is symbolized by a yellow flower, and
- Śakti who is symbolized by a red flower.
Put all different colored flowers in the middle.
This is what the kalpa sūtra says, just this much. Sometimes I add that I would like to invite the entire cosmos to come. Somehow when
I think of that Transcendent Being the cosmos does not enter my head. To appreciate the fullness and grandeur of this being that we
are invoking consider the following statements:
Śrī Cakra gata sarva āvaraṇa devatāḥ svarūpiṇīm - all the deities that are enclosed or pervading the entirety of the śrī cakra;
sarvato bhadra maṇḍala gata - there is one maṇḍala that is composed of 16 squares by 16 squares or 256 squares. In that all the
gods and goddesses in the universe are invoked. That is called sarvatobhadra. This is drawn during śārada navarātri on top of
which we place the coconut and kalasa where we invoke the Devī. We invoke all the deities; sarva āyatana devatāḥ svarūpiṇīm - all
those deities; caturāyatana devatāḥ svarūpiṇīm - around Devī reside Gaṇeśa, Sūrya, Viṣṇu and Śivā all these gods and their
attendants are to be included; divya siddha manava augha guru maṇḍala svarūpiṇīm - all the flows of the gurus are to be invoked
as well; samasta deśa-kāla vastugata jīva caitanya svarūpiṇīm - invite all life forms in all places and all times, gods, celestial
musicians, yakṣas, humanoids, dancers, desirable ones, siddhas, people; samasta deva gandharva yakṣa kinnara apsarā sadya
siddha mānuṣa strīpuruṣa svarūpiṇīm - auspicious Transcendental Goddess, playing erotic games with Transcendental Śivā,
exposing her body without shame for pūjā, not different from myself, pure awareness, I meditate; śrī paradevatām ānanda bhairavīm
ānanda bhairavena parama śivena saḥ ramantīm ramayantīm svātmābhinnām parachitim dhyayami trikhaṇḍa mudrā garbhita
kusumāñjalau- keep flowers in three khaṇḍas and middle of trikhaṇḍa mudrā.
Aim hrīm śrīm ka ē ī la hrīm ha sa ka ha la hrīm sa ka la hrīm ityādaya
(Breathing into the white, yellow and red flowers held in the trikhaṇḍa mudrā the mūla mantra, the
sound form of Devī)
Aim hrīm śrīm hrīm śrīm sauḥ Lalitāyāḥ amṛta caitanya mūrtim kalpayāmi namaḥ Create the
immortal (transcendental) conscious form of Lalitā with the āvaraṇa mantra to Trikoṇa, hrīm śrīm
sauḥ, i.e., the formless Devī is being invoked into taking the form of the flowers by breathing her life,
the mantra.
Say the Pañcadaśī mantra and aim hrīm śrīm, hrīm śrīm sauḥ.
Hrīm śrīm sauḥ is the mantra for the viśuddhi cakra.
Lalitāyāḥ of Lalitā; amṛta the nectar; caitanya mūrtim the awareness which has taken form; kalpayāmi namaḥ I imagine the
immortal awareness which has taken the form of Lalitā.
Aim hrīm śrīm hsraim hsrklīm hsrsauḥ mahā padma vanāntasthē kāraṇānanda vigrahē sarva bhūtā
hitē mātaḥ ēhēhi parameśvari (The union of Śivā and Śakti; space, time, and their union; or desire,
knowledge and action. The world is the mahāpadma in which She resides as the blissful cause of all
this world. The Compassionate Mother of all this world, Please come, do come, O! Parameśvari. Thus
saying, leave the flowers onto the Śrī Cakra or Devī).
Then you hold the breath. Exhale and say aim hrīm śrīm hsraim you put the white flower you are holding on the Devī; hsrklīm you
leave the red flower; and hsrsauḥ you leave the yellow flower. Say the following mantra before releasing the rest of the flowers.
Mahā padma vanāntasthē - The one who resides in the great cosmic lotus; kāraṇānanda vigrahē - kāraṇa means the cause. It also
has a tantric meaning: it represents the viśēṣārghyā. For those who use the rājasic form of worship, kāraṇa means the wine, or
intoxication of the Divine being. That is the state that She is always in. She is bliss and has taken the form of intoxication; sarva
bhūtā all the living beings; hitē one who does good; mātaḥ who is of the nature of the mother; ēhēhi come, come; parameśvari the
one who controls the controller, the Goddess.
Bindu Cakre Śrīmat Kāmēśvarāṅke Śrī ānanda bhairavāya paracaitanyam avahayami namaḥ
5.1 Āvāhana Mudrās
Āvāhana means invitation or invocation. Request Devī to be present in the Yantrā until the end of the
pūjā.
1. Āvāhitā bhava you are invited here (āvāhana 2. Saṁsthāpitā bhava come and sit on top of
mudrā); Śivā and be established here (sthāpanā mudrā);
3. Sannidhāpitā bhava you visualize her in the 4. Sanniddhī bhava she has entered on top of
act of sitting (sannidhāpana mudrā); Śivā (sannidhi mudrā);
5. Sammukhī bhava you are facing me 6. Avakuṇṭhitā bhava remove the veil of
(sammukhi mudrā); ignorance so I can see your full form
(avakuṇṭhana mudrā);
7. Sumukhā bhava (prārthanā mudrā); 8. Suprītā bhava please be pleased (prasāda
mudrā);
9. Suprasannā bhava be of a medium state 10. Varadā bhava grant my wishes (varadā
between calm and excited (prasanna mudrā); mudrā);
This is the invocation to Devī: "Oh Devī, you are the mother of the universe; until the end of the pūjā, will you please be present in
this Yantrā with pleasure" (in the śrī cakra, the idol, the suvāsini or woman in front of you or yourself)
Now, having invoked all the cosmos and all the beings, we must pacify them and give them something to make them happy. The best
thing to pacify them is the nectar we have prepared already. We try to nourish the whole world with the nectar which has all the
celestial lights included in it. Then you add this sentence: āvāhitēbyaḥ those who are invited; sarvēbhyaḥ all of them; sarvapūjārtham
in view of the entire pūjā; idam amṛtam this nectar; samarpayami I offer this nectar in view of the entire pūjā to all the beings
assembled here. Even though you are sitting alone doing this pūjā, you are giving the nectar to the entire cosmos and the beings that
have assembled.
5.2 64 acts of intimate worship to Śrī Lalitā Devī
Follow the 64 acts of intimate worship to Śrī Lalitā Devī in the Yantrā or idol or the suvāsini. When
the 64 upacāras are done to a woman imagining her to be a Śrī Cakra it is called kaulamārga. If we
worship a Śrī Cakra imagining it to be Devī (a female form) it becomes dakṣiṇamārga. We see that
there is no essential difference between the two paths except the direction. For every one of the
upacāras (acts of propitiation) Aim hrīm śrīm Lalitāyai is said in the beginning and kalpayāmi namaḥ
at the end.
1. Aim hrīm śrīm Lalitāyai pādyam kalpayāmi namaḥ Washing Her feet (Offer Sāmānyārghyā)
2. Aim hrīm śrīm Lalitāyai ābharaṇa avarōpaṇam kalpayāmi namaḥ Removal of ornaments and
clothes
3. Aim hrīm śrīm Lalitāyai sugandhi tailābhyaṅganam kalpayāmi namaḥ Applying perfumed oil,
turmeric powder and rubbing with wet gram flour
4. Aim hrīm śrīm Lalitāyai majjana śālā pravēśanam kalpayāmi namaḥ Entering the bathroom
5. Aim hrīm śrīm Lalitāyai majjana śālā mantapa maṇipīthōpa vēśanam kalpayāmi namaḥ Seating
on the jewelled chair
6. Aim hrīm śrīm Lalitāyai divya snānīyōdvartanam kalpayāmi namaḥ Preparation of perfumed
water and pancāmṛtās (milk, curds, honey, ghee, sugar)
7. Aim hrīm śrīm Lalitāyai uṣṇōdaka snānaṃ kalpayāmi namaḥ Bathing with warm water
Here you may recite Śrī Sūktam, Puruṣa Sūktam, Durgā Sūktam, Rudram, Namakam, Camakam etc. as
time permits. The minimum set of mantras which combine the effect of all the vēdas is given below:
With Water
Ōm āpōhiṣthā mayōbhuvastāna ūrje dadhātana | mahēraṇāya cakṣasē ||
yōvaśśivatamōrasaḥ tasya bhājayatē hanaḥ| uśatīriva mātaraḥ||
tasmā araṅgamāmavō yasyakṣayāya jinvatha | āpo janayathācanaḥ ||
śuddhōdaka snānaṃ kalpayāmi namaḥ ||
With Milk (used for the mūlādhārā cakra)
Ōm āpyāyasva samētutē viśvataḥ sōma vṛṣṇiyam |
bhavā vājasya saṅgathē || kṣīrēṇa snāpayāmi |
With Curds (used for the svādhiśthāna cakra)
Ōm dadhikrāvarṇṇō akāriṣam jiṣṇōraśvasya vājinaḥ |
surabhinō mukhā karat praṇa āyugmṣi tāriṣat || dadhnā snāpayāmi |
With Ghee (used for the maṇipūra cakra)
Ōm śukramasi jyōtirasi tējōsi devōvassavitōtpunāt vacchidrēṇa pavitrēṇa vasōḥ
sūryasya raśmibhiḥ || ājyēna snāpayāmi |
With Honey (used for the anāhatā cakra)
Ōm madhu vātā ṛtāyate madhu kṣaranti sindhavaḥ | mādhvīr nassantvōṣadhīḥ ||
madhu naktam utō ṣasi madhu matpārdhivagm rajaḥ | madhu dyaurastunaḥ pitā ||
madhu mānnō vanaspatir madhumāgm astu sūryaḥ | mādhvīr gāvōbhavantunaḥ ||
madhu madhu madhu | madhunā snāpayāmi ||
With Sugar and Water
Ōm svāduḥ pavasva divyāya janmanē | svādur indrāya suhavītu nāmnē ||
svādur mitrāya varuṇāya vāyavē | bṛhaspatayē madhumāgm adābhyaḥ ||
ṣarkarayā snāpayāmi |
With Fruit Juice (used for the viśuddhi cakra)
Ōm yāḥ phalinīr yāḥ aphalāḥ apuṣpāyāsca puṣpiṇīḥ |
bṛhaspatiḥ prasutās tānō muñcastvagm hasaḥ || phalōdakēna snāpayāmi
With perfumed water
Ōm āpōhiṣthā mayōbhuvastāna ūrje dadhātana | mahēraṇāya cakṣasē ||
yōvaśśivatamōrasaḥ tasya bhājayatē hanaḥ| uśatīriva mātaraḥ||
tasmā araṅgamāmavō yasyakṣayāya jinvatha | āpo janayathācanaḥ || gandhodakena snāpayāmi ||
Continue abhiṣekam with the following mantras:
Lakṣmī - with milk preferably (used to worship at the heart center; breasts of the Devī)
Ōm hiraṇya varnām hariṇīm suvarṇa rajatasrajām
Candrām hiraṇmayīm lakṣmīm jātavēdō mamāvaha
Viṣṇu - with milk (used to worship at the heart center; nipples of the Devī)
Ōm sahasra śīrṣā puruṣaḥ sahasrākṣaḥ sahasrapāt
sabhūmim viśvatō vrtvā atyatiṣṭhad daśāngulam
Durgā - with milk and kuṅkumam (worship the Svādhiṣṭhāna cakra)
tām agni varṇām tapasā jvalantīm vairōcanīm karmaphalēṣu juṣṭām
durgām devīgm śaraṇamaham prapadyē sutarasi tarasē namaḥ
(In general, if one wants to abbreviate the recitation of the Sūktams, primarily the first stanza maybe
recited. However, in the Durgā Sūktam the second stanza is more potent as this stanza emphasizes on
the surge of the (procreative) energy)
Śivā - with coconut water preferably or any fruit juice or perfumed water (chanted for the worship of
the Śivā Liṅga, the clitoris or the phallus)
Ōm tryambakam yajāmahē sugandhim puṣṭivardhanam | urvārukamiva bandhanān mṛtyōr mukṣīya
māmṛtāt |
Ōm mṛtyavē svāhā mṛtyavē svāḧā
Ōm namō bhagavatē rudrāya viṣṇavē mṛtyurmē pāhī | prāṇānām granthirasi rudrō māviśāntakaḥ |
tēnān nēnāpyāyasva | mama mṛtyur naśyat vāyur vardhatām
Ōm śāntiḥ śāntiḥ śāntiḥ
Vēdas: Ŕg, Yajur, Sāma and Atharvaṇa
Ōm jātavēdasē sunavāma sōmam arātīyatō nidahātivēdaḥ
sanaḥ parṣadati durgāṇi viśvā nāvēva sindhum duritātyagniḥ
Ōm bhūr bhuvassuvaḥ tat savitur varēṇyam bhargō dēvasya dhīmahi
dhīyōyōnaḥ pracodayāt parō rajasē sāvadōm
Ōm tryambakam yajāmahē sugandhim puṣṭivardhanam
urvārukamiva bandhanān mṛtyōr mukṣīya māmṛtāt
If possible do abhiṣekam with paṇcamṛtams over the māngalya sūtram on which haldi and
kuṅkumam have been applied earlier.
Ōm amṛitābhiṣēkōstu, kanakābhiṣēkōstu, hiraṇyābhiṣēkōstu, suvarṇābhiṣēkōstu,
divyamaṅgalābhiṣēkōstu, mahābhiṣēkōstu. (When you say amṛitābhiṣēkōstu, it invigorates all 100
jīva kalās)
8. Aim hrīm śrīm Lalitāyai kanaka kalaśacyuta sakala tīrthābhiṣekam kalpayāmi namaḥ Washing the
Śri Cakra with Sāmānyārghyā
9. Aim hrīm śrīm Lalitāyai dhauta vastra parimārjanam kalpayāmi namaḥ Drying Her body with a
white towel.
10. Aim hrīm śrīm Lalitāyai aruṇa dukūla paridhānam kalpayāmi namaḥ Red shawl to cover
11.Aim hrīm śrīm Lalitāyai aruṇa kucōttarīyam kalpayāmi namaḥ Red top garment (brassiere)
12. Aim hrīm śrīm Lalitāyai ālēpa maṇṭapa pravēśanam kalpayāmi namaḥ Entering the make-up room
13. Aim hrīm śrīm Lalitāyai ālēpa maṇṭapa maṇipīṭha upavēśanam kalpayāmi namaḥ Seating Her in
the make-up room.
14. Aim hrīm śrīm Lalitāyai candana - agaru - kuṅkuma - śaṅkhu - mṛgamada - karpūra - kastūrī -
gōrōcanādi - divya gandha – sarvāṇgīṇa vilēpanam kalpayāmi namaḥ Applying different kinds of
perfumes appropriate to different parts of the body.
15. Aim hrīm śrīm Lalitāyai kēśabhārasya kālāgaru dhūpam kalpayāmi namaḥ Drying Her heavy wet
hair with agaru and sambraṇi dhūpam
16. Aim hrīm śrīm Lalitāyai mallikā - mālatī - jātī - campaka - aśōka - śatapatra - pūga - kuḍalī -
punnāga -kalhāra - mukhya sarvaṛtu kusuma mālam kalpayāmi namaḥ All kinds of fragrant flowers
arranged in different garlands
17. Aim hrīm śrīm Lalitāyai bhūṣana maṇṭapa pravēśanam kalpayāmi namaḥ Entering the jewellery
room
18. Aim hrīm śrīm Lalitāyai bhūṣana maṇṭapa maṇipītha upavēśanam kalpayāmi namaḥ Seating her
in the jewellery room.
19. Aim hrīm śrīm Lalitāyai nava maṇi makuṭam kalpayāmi namaḥ Crown jewels
20. Aim hrīm śrīm Lalitāyai candra śakalam kalpayāmi namaḥ An ornament to represent the moon
21. Aim hrīm śrīm Lalitāyai sīmanta sindūram kalpayāmi namaḥ Vermillion in the hair-parting
After you have given the baths, you wash Devī with the sāmānyārghyam. You dry Her with a white towel. You don't want a draft to
create a chill, so you give Her a red shawl to cover her body. You offer Her a red garment just to cover Her breasts. Then you bring
Her to the makeup room and seat Her. You apply eight different types of perfumes to Her body in different places. You dry Her hair
and perfume it with dhūpam, incense, from behind. You offer all kinds of flowers. You then take Her to the room where you offer Her
different kinds of jewelry. Apply the kuṅkumam on Her hair parting.
22. Aim hrīm śrīm Lalitāyai tilaka ratṇam kalpayāmi namaḥ Jewels to represent the third eye
Her third eye is normally closed so you put a jewel on top of it to cover it. She never opens Her third eye because when She does, the
whole world gets destroyed.
23. Aim hrīm śrīm Lalitāyai kālāñjanam kalpayāmi namaḥ Mascara and eye-liner
24. Aim hrīm śrīm Lalitāyai vālīyugalaṁ kalpayāmi namaḥ Head-set and ear ornaments
25. Aim hrīm śrīm Lalitāyai maṇikuṇdala yugalam kalpayāmi namaḥ Pair of earrings
26. Aim hrīm śrīm Lalitāyai nāsābharaṇam kalpayāmi namaḥ Diamond nose-stud (Venus)
27. Aim hrīm śrīm Lalitāyai adharayāvakam kalpayāmi namaḥ Lipstick and pearl pendant from the
nose shining on Her red lower lip
28. Aim hrīm śrīm Lalitāyai prathama bhūṣaṇam kalpayāmi namaḥ Maṅgala sūtram
Offer kuṅkumam to the suvāsinis present for the pūjā and have them apply it on their māngalyam.
29. Aim hrīm śrīm Lalitāyai kanaka cintākam kalpayāmi namaḥ Gold-sovereign chain
30. Aim hrīm śrīm Lalitāyai patakam kalpayāmi namaḥ Small locket
31. Aim hrīm śrīm Lalitāyai mahāpatakam kalpayāmi namaḥ Big locket (Śrī Cakram)
32. Aim hrīm śrīm Lalitāyai muktāvalim kalpayāmi namaḥ Pearl necklace
33. Aim hrīm śrīm Lalitāyai ekāvalim kalpayāmi namaḥ Single strand necklace
34. Aim hrīm śrīm Lalitāyai channavīram kalpayāmi namaḥ An open flower garland coming up to the
feet
35. Aim hrīm śrīm Lalitāyai keyūrayugala catuṣṭayam kalpayāmi namaḥ Arm bracelets for the four
hands
36. Aim hrīm śrīm Lalitāyai valayāvalim kalpayāmi namaḥ Bangles
37. Aim hrīm śrīm Lalitāyai ūrmikāvalim kalpayāmi namaḥ 20 rings
38. Aim hrīm śrīm Lalitāyai kāñcīdāma kalpayāmi namaḥ Waist bracelet (gold)
39. Aim hrīm śrīm Lalitāyai kaṭi sūtram kalpayāmi namaḥ Gold girdle
40. Aim hrīm śrīm Lalitāyai saubhāgyābharanam kalpayāmi namaḥ Girdle pendant
41. Aim hrīm śrīm Lalitāyai pāda kaṭakam kalpayāmi namaḥ Anklets
42. Aim hrīm śrīm Lalitāyai ratna nūpuram kalpayāmi namaḥ Small tinkling anklets
43. Aim hrīm śrīm Lalitāyai pādāṅguliyakam kalpayāmi namaḥ Silver rings placed on second toe.
If you look at the bhārata nāṭyam dancers you will find that the ornaments that She wears all over Her body are exactly those
described here in the pūjā. Also the various symbols that you see in meditation correspond to what you see here. There are twelve of
these symbols that flash in your mind's eye. All this jewellery you adorn Her with.
44. Aim hrīm śrīm Lalitāyai eka kārē pāśam kalpayāmi namaḥ In top left hand, a noose
45. Aim hrīm śrīm Lalitāyai anya karē aṅkuśam kalpayāmi namaḥ In top right hand, a goad
46. Aim hrīm śrīm Lalitāyai itara karē puṇḍrēkṣu cāpam kalpayāmi namaḥ In bottom left hand, a
sugarcane bow with a thread of bees
47. Aim hrīm śrīm Lalitāyai apara karē puṣpabāṇān kalpayāmi namaḥ In bottom right hand, flowery
arrows
48. Aim hrīm śrīm Lalitāyai śrīman māṇikya pādukē kalpayāmi namaḥ Red-jewel slippers
Offer Her red jewelled sandals, which are kept on the top of your head. Her feet are resting on your head all the time.
49. Aim hrīm śrīm Lalitāyai svasamāna veṣābhirāvaraṇa devatābhīssahā mahā cakrādhi rōhaṇam
kalpayāmi namaḥ Climbing onto the mahā cakra with all Her āvaraṇa devatās who are similarly
attired and adorned
Offering no. 49 says, svasamāna vēśābhir having similarly adorned; āvaraṇa devatā the deities of the enclosures of the Śrī Cakra;
bhīssahā mahā cakrādhi rōhaṇam you make Her to climb onto the Śrī Cakra and sit on the bindusthānaṃ.
50. Aim hrīm śrīm Lalitāyai Kāmēśvara aṅkaparyaṅka upavēśanam kalpayāmi namaḥ Sitting on top of
Kāmeśvara who is lying down flat, face up
Offering no. 50 says Kāmēśvara aṅkaparyaṅka upavēśanam on Lord Parameśvara's; you seat Her on Lord Śivā's left thigh. If you
are a male and are doing pūjā to a woman or to a girl, it is at this point that you ask them to come and sit on your left thigh. If you
are both female it doesn't matter. The polarity need not be there. You are both Śivā and Śakti.
From here onwards, aim hrīm śrīm can be replaced with Ōm aim hrīm śrīm. Ōm is included because of Kāmeśvara’s presence.
51. Ōm aim hrīm śrīm Lalitāyai amṛtāsava caṣakam kalpayāmi namaḥ Viśēṣārghyām (nectar; offer
Viśēṣārghyām)
52. Ōm aim hrīm śrīm Lalitāyai ācamanīyam kalpayāmi namaḥ Sāmānyārghyam (perfumed water;
offer Sāmānyārghyam)
53. Ōm aim hrīm śrīm Lalitāyai karpūra vīṭikām kalpayāmi namaḥ Sweet pan
You give Devī pan and tāmbūlam as a mouth freshener. It is then that Devī gives a little smile and it is for this smile that you have
been waiting all this time.
54. Ōm aim hrīm śrīm Lalitāyai ānandōllāsa vilāsa hāsam kalpayāmi namaḥ Smile bubbling from joy
within
55. Ōm aim hrīm śrīm Lalitāyai maṅgalārartikam kalpayāmi namaḥ Ghee lamp
56. Ōm aim hrīm śrīm Lalitāyai chatram kalpayāmi namaḥ Umbrella (a sign of royalty)
57. Ōm aim hrīm śrīm Lalitāyai cāmara yugalam kalpayāmi namaḥ Pair of fans held by Sarasvatī and
Lakṣmī
Offer the light offering of maṅgala ārati. Offer Her the umbrella which is a royal insignia. On either side Lakṣmī and Sarasvatī are
fanning Her with yaks tail fans.
58. Ōm aim hrīm śrīm Lalitāyai darpaṇam kalpayāmi namaḥ Mirror. (She, as the worshipper, sees Her
form the Universe, reflected in mind, the mirror).
59. Ōm aim hrīm śrīm Lalitāyai tāla vṛntam kalpayāmi namaḥ Palm leaf fan
60. Ōm aim hrīm śrīm Lalitāyai gandham kalpayāmi namaḥ Sandal paste
61. Ōm aim hrīm śrīm Lalitāyai puṣpam kalpayāmi namaḥ Floral bouquet
62. Ōm aim hrīm śrīm Lalitāyai dhūpam kalpayāmi namaḥ Incense
63. Ōm aim hrīm śrīm Lalitāyai dīpam kalpayāmi namaḥ Lights
64. Ōm aim hrīm śrīm Lalitāyai naivēdyam kalpayāmi namaḥ Food offerings
Offer sandal paste, flowers, incense, light and a food offering. These offerings correspond to the different cakras as well.
- Sandal is offered to the mūlādhārā cakra;
- Flowers are offered to the ājñā cakra; they represent the "indriya nigraham", the control of the five senses;
- Incense is offered at the heart center;
- Light is offered at the navel center;
- Naivēdyam is offered at the svādhiṣṭhāna cakra because they say that Kāli the Mother Goddess likes to have "nara māṁsam" as
naivēdyam. Nara māṁsam - If you understand this properly, the human flesh that is offered to Her is the male liṅgam. It is the
pleasurable naivēdyam that is offered to her. It is the divine union that is offered to her as naivēdyam.
In Devī upāsanā madya, matsya, mamsa, mudrā, maithuna these are the five ingredients that are Her naivēdyam.
Madya means liquor or intoxication. Like you are constantly taking liquor, when you think of the Mother Goddess you are in a state
of ecstacy. The word ecstasy means standing out of your body, you are having an out of the body experience. There is the feeling of
lightness, like you are floating on a cloud that you get when you are drunk. The Tantrā Śāstra states "drink, drink and drink again
until you fall on the ground. You get up and drink again. Then you obtain moksha or liberation." What it means is as the kuṇḍalinī
cakra rises from the Mūlādhārā cakra, you are having an out of the body experience. But that does not stay for long. You again
have to assume your body consciousness. Then you have to drink again to reach that state again. You have to move the energy up the
cakras as it tries to come down. This is the music you play inside yourself and you try to maintain that state. That is the way to
liberation. This statement is a misleading statement. Tantrics have a way of writing things that is called "sandhyā bhāṣā", in coded
language. Those who do not have access to a proper guru will follow down the wrong path and get degraded. Madya is the constant
energizing the cakras one by one from the lower to the higher.
Matsya like a fish that moves in the ocean in any direction of its choice, so in the bliss of God you are moving wherever the flow
takes you, flowing with your body, mind, and intellect knowing all the time that what you are doing is divine. That is matsya bhava.
Some people interpret it to mean that you offer fish to the Devī.
Mamsa is the knowledge. It comes from the statement "yō māmātti sa māṁ admi", meaning what you eat is going to eat you tomorrow.
I am eating food. I am going to die. When I die I become food for the worms and the plants. Food which is eating itself is that
knowledge called mamsa. It is also human flesh, the liṅgam offered into the yonī of the Devī.
Mudrās are the hand gestures. Drām drīm klīm blūm, etc.
Maithuna is the intercourse. Intercourse is not limited to a certain time when the male and the female are together. It is in a broader
context. We are always in intercourse. You are having continuous intercourse with the entire world. Your seeing is union; your
hearing is union; your every action becomes union. Whether the actual maithuna happens or not it is irrelevant. But she accepts the
union as naivēdyam to her.
Those unable to procure all of the ingredients above may substitute them with a drop of water from the
Sāmānyārghyā.
5.3 Daśa Mudrās
1. Drām 2. Drīm
3. Klīm 4. Blūm
5. Saḥ 6. Krōm
7. Hskphrēm 8. Hsaum Sahauḥ
The devotee requests permission to do the pūjā with mantras and mudrās. The ten mudrās are the postures in a dance where the
intention is conveyed in a sign language, posture in yoga like kēcari or śāmbhavī mudrās. In this process you are requesting Devī to
execute the pūjā in certain ways. We do aṅga pūjās to Devī. We say that Devī is physically present when we are able to speak, touch
her, taste her and smell her perfumes. The senses of hearing, touching, seeing, tasting and smelling are the first five mudrās through
which we ask her permission to do these actions. The next five mudrās represent anger as negative elements, the ability to merge in
space through astral bodies, and to place the seed into the yonī (means: the essential content of seed is knowing how to make a new
form and put life into it, so this is a request to exchange indepth information, worship the creative center). After the nine mudrās
Devī/Suvāsini usually gives permission by showing the 10th mudrā which means that you can worship me as Anandabhairavī in every
possible way. If the Suvāsini does not wish to give a full permission she shows it by Abhaya and Varadā mudrās. Dip a flower in
Viśēṣārghyām and touch her feet with that and keep it aside.
End of Lalithā Kramam
6 | PART-3: NAVĀVARAṆA PŪJĀ - EXTERNAL
Aim hrīm śrīm ka ē ī la hrīm ha sa ka ha la hrīm sa ka la hrīm Lalitā Śrī pādukām pūjayāmi
tarpayāmi namaḥ
Mix some flower petals and akśatàs; take these with the right hand. With any stick shaped like a vel* -
similar to a spear (Śakti), hold in the left hand, dip into the viśēṣārghyām and take a drop of it. Offer all
these together to the Śrī Cakram, at the centre, 3 times, saying the above mantra. Puṣpa and akśatās
constitute pūjā and a drop of viśēṣārghyām constitutes tarpaṇam. This process is to be repeated with
every mantra hereafter.
* Significance of the vel: If you look at the yoni, there are three prongs. The two labia on either side
and the middle prong is the Vel, where Kumāra, the small śivā in the clitoris lives. Bindu in Śrī Cakra
is called Sarvānandamaya, the seat of all pleasure. Its worship is central to Śrī Cakra pūjā.
Pādukām pūjayāmi tarpayāmi namaḥ (I worship and offer water libations to your Feet)
From this point onwards at the end of each mantra you say Śrī Pādukām pūjayāmi tarpayāmi namaḥ. If you look at the two feet standing
together, you will see that they also form a yonī. When you worship the feet you worship them as you do the yonī. We receive the energy from
the feet of our guru, our Śakti.
When you are very young, before the age of puberty, you can still have an orgasm. That orgasm is not at the genitals but it is shown as a jerk
in the big toe. The Śakti flows from the left foot's big toe. We receive the energy from the underside of the big toe. Even before puberty at the
age of five onwards children feel this orgasmic sensation.
6.2 Six Aṅgadevatās
1. Aim hrīm śrīm ka ē ī la hrīm hṛdayāya namaḥ hṛdaya śakti Śrī pādukām pūjayāmi tarpayāmi
namaḥ
2. Aim hrīm śrīm ha sa ka ha la hrīm śirasē svāhā śira śakti Śrī pādukām pūjayāmi tarpayāmi
namaḥ
3. Aim hrīm śrīm sa ka la hrīm śikhāyai vaṣaṭ śikha śakti Śrī pādukām pūjayāmi tarpayāmi namaḥ
4. Aim hrīm śrīm ka ē ī la hrīm kavacāya hum kavaca śakti Śrī pādukām pūjayāmi tarpayāmi namaḥ
5. Aim hrīm śrīm ha sa ka ha la hrīm nētratrayāya vauṣaṭ netra śakti Śrī pādukām pūjayāmi
tarpayāmi namaḥ
6. Aim hrīm śrīm sa ka la hrīm astrāya phaṭ astra śakti Śrī pādukām pūjayāmi tarpayāmi namaḥ
The Aṅgadevatās
You offer the aṅga nyāsam to the different parts of Devī's body and your body. You may touch these points or both can perform on each
other. This is the meaning of seeing the four hands of the pictures and mūrtis of the Deities. Two hands belong to you and two hands belong to
her. You are not separate, you are one. The order of touching the points around the Śrī Cakra is the same as you have done for the
sāmānyārghyam.
6.3 Nityā Pūjā
Worship the 15 Nityās, 5 per side, on the 3 sides of the central triangle with their mantras given below
(see diagram above for their locations).
The 16th one is to be worshipped in the center.
1. Kāmēśvarī Nityā
Aim hrīm śrīm
am aim sakala hrīm nityaklinnē mada dravē sauḥ
am Kāmēśvarī nityā Śrī Pādukām pūjayāmi tarpayāmi namaḥ
2. Bhagamālinī Nityā
Aim hrīm śrīm
ām aim bhagabhugē bhagini bhagōdari bhagamālē
bhagāvahē bhagaguhyē bhagayonī bhaganipatini
sarvabhaga vaśamkarī bhagarūpe nityaklinnē bhagasvarūpē
sarvāni bhagāni mē hyānaya varadē rētē surētē
bhagaklinnē klinnadravē klēdaya drāvaya amōghē
bhagaviccē kṣubha kṣōbhaya sarvasatvān
bhagēśvari aim blūm jēm blūm
bhēm blūm, mōm blūm, hēm blūm hēm klinnē sarvāni
bhagānimē vaśamānaya
strīm hrblēm hrīm
ām Bhagamālinī nityā Śrī Pādukām pūjayāmi tarpayāmi namaḥ
(The word Bhaga means source; Bhagamālinī represents the source of all Śaktis, all the alphabets in
Sanskrit).
3. Nityaklinnā Nityā
Aim hrīm śrīm
im ōm hrīm nityaklinnē madadravē svāhā im Nityaklinnā Śrī Pādukām pūjayāmi tarpayāmi namaḥ
4. Bheruṇḍā Nityā
Aim hrīm śrīm
īm ōm krōm bhrōm
kraum jhraum chraum jraum svāhā īm Bheruṇḍā Śrī pādukām pūjayāmi tarpayāmi namaḥ
5. Vahnivaśinī Nityā
Aim hrīm śrīm
um ōm hrīm vahnivāsinyai namaḥ um Vahnivāsinī Śrī Pādukām pūjayāmi tarpayāmi namaḥ
7. Śivadūtī Nityā
Aim hrīm śrīm
ṛm hrīm śivadūtyai namaḥ
ṛm Śivadūtī Śrī Pādukām pūjayāmi tarpayāmi namaḥ
8. Tvaritā Nityā
Aim hrīm śrīm ṝm ōm hrīm hum khē-ca chē-kṣaḥ strīm hum kṣēm hrīm phat ṝm Tvaritā Śrī Pādukām
pūjayāmi tarpayāmi namaḥ
9. Kulasundarī Nityā
Aim hrīm śrīm
ḷm aim klīm sauḥ ḷm Kulasundarī Śrī Pādukām pūjayāmi tarpayāmi namaḥ
Gaṇeśa
The Gaṇeśa Mantra is:
Ōm śrīm hrīm klīm glaum gaṁ gaṇapatayē vara varada sarva janammē vaśamānaya svāhā (Recite 4-
times; concentration should be at the mūlādhāra cakra. Typically, this mantra maybe said during the
day where, Śukla Sarasvatī is with Gaṇapati and Siddhi and Buddhi are distinguished.
Sūrya
Hrīm ghṛṇiḥ sūrya ādityōm*
(Recite 12-times; concentration should be at the anāhata cakra)
Viṣṇu
Ōm namō nārāyaṇāya namaḥ (Recite 12-times; concentration should be at the madhya - kūṭa
extending from the anāhata cakra to the ājñā cakra. Visualize Mahāviṣṇu and Mahālakṣmī united
in the flame that arises and envelopes the space therein)
Nārāyaṇa means who resides in naram = ocean of water (life). Nārāyaṇa (Viṣṇu) the sthiti-karta stays in svādhiṣṭhāna.
Vāsudeva (īśvara) resides in anāhata, the love center. He limits the expansiveness. He is the power of limiting God to become jīva, a
mere speck of Himself. He contols of māyā = tirodhāna = limitation.
God has unlimited powers. Power to be at all places, all times, all matter, know all, do all.
Lalita is said to do five acts:
1. sṛṣṭi (create), 2. sthiti (preserve), 3. laya (reabsorb into rhythms), 4. tirodhāna (limit) and 5. anugraha (unlimit).
Brāhma, Nārāyaṇa (Viṣṇu), Rudra, īśvara (Vāsudeva), and sādāśiva.
Śivā
Ōm namaḥ śivāyai Ōm namaḥ śivāya (Recite 5-times; concentration should be at the ājñā cakra)
When "Ōm namaḥ śivāyai" is intoned the energy from the mūlādhāra rises while the energy from sahasrāra flows down and unites
at the ājñā. And when "Ōm namaḥ śivāya" is intoned this process reverses.
6.6 Vighna Hara Mantras
There are recommendation in the Paraśurāma Kalpa Sūtrās - sarva sādhāraṇa krama, of optional
prerequisites prior to the rituals to the Śyāmā, Vārāhi and Sundari deities. These are referred to as
the Vighna Hara mantras, which are in Paraśurāma Kalpa Sūtrās - sarva sādhāraṇa karma and the
uddhara (extract) is given below.
atha vighna-devatāḥ |
iri-mili-kiri-kili-padāt parimirom - iti ekaḥ |
praṇavo māyā namo bhagavati mahā-tripurād bhai-varṇād ravi-padam anu mama
traipurarakṣāṃ kuru kuru - iti dvitīyaḥ |
saṃhara saṃhara vighna-rakṣo-vibhīṣakān kālaya huṃ phaṭ svāhā - iti tṛtīyaḥ |
blūṃ raktābhyo yoginībhyo namaḥ - iti caturthaḥ |
sāṃ sārasāya bahv-āśanāya namaḥ - iti pañcamaḥ |
dumuluṣu muluṣu māyā cāmuṇḍāyai namaḥ - iti ṣaṣṭhaḥ |
ete manavo lalitā-japa-vighna-devatāḥ || 10.51 ||
hasanti hasitālāpe padaṃ mātam uktvā gī-paricārike mama bhaya-vighna-nāśaṃ kuru-dvitayaṃ sa-
visarga-ṭha-tritayam iti śyāmā-vighna-devī || 10.52 ||
staṃ stambhinyai namaḥ - iti kola-mukhī-vighna-devī || 10.53 ||
ete tat-taj-japārambhe japtavyāḥ || 10.54 ||
These mantras have to be chanted before the main mantra japa of each of the following deities.
Śyāmā
aiṃ klīm sauḥ hasanti hasitālāpe mātaṅgī-paricārike mama bhaya-vighna-nāśaṃ kuru-kuru ṭhaḥ
ṭhaḥ ṭhaḥ
6.6.7 Ṣōḍaśi
śrīm hrīm klīm aim sauḥ, ōm hrīm śrīm, ka ē ī la hrīm, ha sa ka ha la hrīm, sa ka la hrīm, sauḥ aim
klīm hrīm śrīm
Lalitāmbikā Śrī pādukām pūjayāmi tarpayāmi namaḥ
Aṅga and Pratyaṅga are attendants of main goddess on her right and left i.e. Śyāmā and Vārāhi for
Lalita (Sundari).
6.7 1st Āvaraṇa (Trailōkyamōhana Cakra)
The Square Enclosures
The Eight Passions
When you are at the square, you are down to the earth, to the present level, where you think you are distinct from others, fighting,
playing your ego and power games. This is represented in the outmost enclosures. It is here that sṛṣṭi is completely manifested.
Let us take the example of the little pot drawn above. The pot is the concept of the self, the ego structure. The individual is created,
the cosmos is created and the flow of time is being experienced. You are experiencing your interactions with the world, and these
interactions are sometimes pleasant and sometimes unpleasant. You experience fear, lust, anger, and all these things. These
experiences which are generated by the five arrows that are coming in, the five senses that are agitating your mind. You say, "I like
this, I want this. Without this I cannot live." Lust is called the passion Brāhmi. When you are denied that lust, you get angry. Anger is
Māhēśvarī. Kaumārī is possessiveness, Vaiṣṇavī is delusion, and Vārāhī is pride. Māhēndrī is jealousy. Mahālakṣmī is vice of
attachment and Cāmuṇda is the virtue of letting go. Why is Mahālakṣmī called vice? Because attachment to wealth creates enmity;
even between the mother and her child. Such attachment can only be a vice. These are the Eight passions.
The ten Mudrā Śaktis and ten Siddhis
There are ways of overcoming these disturbing influences and these are called the "Mudrā Śaktis." The attainments that you get by
controlling these influences are called the "Attainments" or the "Siddhis".
The first mudrā Śakti is Sarva Samkṣōbhiṇī. This means agitation. You are agitated but you transfer your agitation over onto
everything else. You interact with everyone. Kṣobhaṇa actually means interaction and/or intercourse. Limited interaction within a
circle is possible for any ego bound structure. But can you expand it to include the whole cosmos? How can you be in love with a
cockroach? A bird? A swan? A flea? A star? A thermonuclear fusion? A hydrogen bomb? When you have the notion that you love
everything, this overcomes your limitations. You realize the notion of love does not mean trying to possess the thing you are wanting to
hold onto but in letting go of the very thing. Love is not imposing our will on others. It is trying to find out what others want and trying
to give it to them to the best of your ability. Sarva Samkṣōbhiṇī Mudrā moves you from initial feelings of lust to love. This mudrā is the
act of expressing love. Love takes different forms according to the object of your love. It is not the same mode in every case. You love
fire by not touching it. Embracing a friend is an expression of love. Both are expressions of love. Because I love my child I don't want
to give too many chocolates because it is not good for the child. Chocolates taste good, but too much is bad. I know this but the child
does not know. The parent's expression of love to the child includes denying sometimes what the child wants, knowing that it is not
good for the child.
Love does not just mean sex alone. It means all types of interactions where you are trying to give your best to others, where giving is
what the partner needs, not what you want to give; where letting go is detaching yourself of the fruits of your action. Sometimes, your
giving may yield your expected result, sometimes not. Love means detachment to both the expectation and the result, not detachment
to the action.
Let me tell you a story. Supposing there is a man eating tiger roaming around in a village. A woman hears the roar of the tiger. She is
trying to protect herself by running into all the closed doors and somehow finds a little door where she can enter to hide. The next day
she is carrying her child and the same tiger comes along. All the doors are closed. There is no way she can escape. What does she
do? She keeps the child somewhere else and goes and offers herself as prey to the tiger. This is an expression of her love towards her
child. Love overcomes the fear of death. She goes and offers herself and makes the supreme sacrifice to protect her child. Love has
the power to overcome fear. Fear is the worst possible enemy in you. Your worst enemies are all inside of you. The enemies of any
country are not the other countries, but the fears that the governments have about them. If people could only understand that our
enemies are all inside ourselves, we would not need all these weapons, guns, shootings. Sometimes the words we speak to each other
are worse than guns.
The Śrī Cakra is an expression of the cosmos, of yourself, and also the means of connecting these two. It represents a ladder by
which you can come out of your limitations. The four gates are the four basic types of knowledge; Ŕg Vēda, Yajur Vēda, Sāma Vēda,
Atharvaṇa Vēda. Vēda is called Śruti. What you hear in your meditation in that deep state of tranquillity is called Śruti.
ĀVARAṆA-1
Outer Line
Mantra Bījakṣara Nāma
1 am Aṇimā Siddhyai Namaḥ
Laghimā Siddhyai Namaḥ
2 lam
Garimā Siddhyai Namaḥ
3 mam Mahimā Siddhyai Namaḥ
4 īm Īśitva Siddhyai Namaḥ
5 am ām sauḥ vam Vaśitva Siddhyai Namaḥ
6 pam Prākāmya Siddhyai Namaḥ
7 bhum Bhukti Siddhyai Namaḥ
8 im Icchā Siddhyai Namaḥ
9 pam Prāpti Siddhyai Namaḥ
10 sam Sarvakāma Siddhyai Namaḥ
Middle Line
Mantra Bījakṣara Nāma
Brāhmi Mātṛkā Devyai
11 ām 1
Namaḥ
Māhēśvarī Mātṛkā Devyai
12 īm
Namaḥ
Kaumārī Mātṛkā Devyai
13 ūm
Namaḥ
Vaiṣṇavī Mātṛkā Devyai
14 am ām sauḥ ṝm
Namaḥ
Vārāhī Mātṛkā Devyai
15 ḹm
Namaḥ
Māhēndrī Mātṛkā Devyai
16 aim
Namaḥ
Cāmuṇda Mātṛkā Devyai
17 aum
Namaḥ
Mahālakṣmī Mātṛkā Devyai
18 aḥm
Namaḥ
Inner Line
Mantra Bījakṣara Nāma Mudrās
Sarva Samkṣōbhiṇyai
19 Drām Mahā Mudrā Svarūpa 4
Namaḥ (Sound)
Sarva Vidrāviṇyai
20 Drīm Mahā Bandha Sva
Namaḥ (Touch)
Sarvākarṣiṇyai Namaḥ
21 Klīm Mahā Vēda Sva
(Form)
Sarva Vaśamkaryai
22 Blūm Jālandhara Bandha Sva
Namaḥ (Taste)
Sarvōnmādinyai
Udḍiyāna Bandha
23 am ām sauḥ Saḥ Namaḥ (Enjoy
Svarūpa
Perfume)
Sarva Mahāṅkuśāyai
24 Krōm Mūla Bhanda Sva
Namaḥ (Anger)
Sarva Khēcaryai
25 Hskphrēm Namaḥ (Movements in Kēcari Sva
Sky)
Sarva Bījayai Namaḥ
26 Hsaum Sahauḥ 2 Viparītakaranī Sva
(Seed)
Sarva Yonyai Namaḥ
27 Aim Vajrolī Svarūpa
(Yonī)
Hsraim Hsrklīm Sarva Trikhaṇḍāyai
28 Śakti Chalana Sva
Hsrsauḥ 3 Namaḥ (Trikhaṇḍā)
1 "am...aḥm" - Middle Line encompasses Bījakṣaras found at the Viśuddhi Region; those with longer sounds only.
2 "Hsaum Sahauḥ" - It is the reversal of sequence between "S" and "H". "H" in front makes Śivā lead Śakti; "S" in front makes
Śakti lead Śivā. Śivā likes yoga and not release seed. Śakti likes to extract his seed to procreate.
3 "Hsraim Hsrklīm Hsrsauḥ" - (Hsraim=Tongue, Hsrklīm=Nipples, Hsrsauḥ=Clitoris).
'Ha'= Śivā; placed at the location of Sarasvatī (tongue) Aim
'Sa' = Śakti; placed at the location of Lakṣmī (nipples) Klīm
'r'= Union; placed at the location of Pārvatī (clitoris) Sauḥ. In Kaulacāra, clitoris is the Bindu where Pārvatī is visualized.
4 Svarūpa - Divine form
6.8 2nd Āvaraṇa (Sarvāśāparipūraka Cakra)
The 16 Petalled Lotus
You not only experience these things statically, but also experience them dynamically. Time is measured in terms of the lunar
calendar because it is the fastest moving object in the sky next only to the Sun. This is the lunar clock. The lunar clock is divided into
16 digits or phases of the moon. The phases of moon are shown as the 16 petalled lotus. Just as the woman menstruates every 28th
day of the cycle, the cosmos has its cycles and periods. Lunar is also associated with lunatic, because sometimes we go crazy,
disorderely, irrational, sometimes we maintain our balance. There are cosmic cycles with which we sometimes resonate and
sometimes not, sometimes we are lunatic and sometimes sane. Each day of the week is also associated with one of the planets and
there are different pūjās done on these days. On Sunday we do pūjā to all the nine planets, including the sun. Monday we worship
Śivā. Tuesday is for the war-like Durgā. Wednesday is very sacred to Rama. Thursday is for Guru and Mahālakṣmī. Friday is for the
worship of the woman. Saturday is for worshipping Saturn or the couple. Kanyās (virgin girls) are worshipped on Tuesdays, married
women are worshipped on Fridays, and both the husband and wife are worshipped on Saturdays, and the man is worshipped on
Mondays. These are the days for worship.
Follow the 16 Attractive Powers identified with the 16 days of the lunar calendar. According to the Hindu art of love, the erotic zone
moves up from the feet to head in the bright half of the lunar month and comes down to the dark half of the lunar month. The
expression of the eros through the various power of the mind described above: The Gods of the 2nd Enclosure. Sarvāśāparipūraka
Cakra Svāmini, Gupta Yōginī. The Wheel which fulfills all Directions and all Desires, the Secret Yōginī - Female Yōginī
ĀVARAṆA-2
Mantra Bījakṣara 16 Vowels)1 Nāma
1 am Kāmākarṣiṇyai Namaḥ - Lust
2 ām Buddhyākarṣiṇyai Namaḥ - Discrimination
3 im Ahamkārākarṣiṇyai Namaḥ - Ego
4 īm Śabdākarṣiṇyai Namaḥ - Sound
5 um Sparśākarṣiṇyai Namaḥ - Touch
6 ūm Rūpākarṣiṇyai Namaḥ - Form
7 ṛm Rasākarṣiṇyai Namaḥ - Taste
8 aim klīm sauḥ ṝm Gandhākarṣiṇyai Namaḥ - Odour
9 ḷm Cittākarṣiṇyai Namaḥ - Aware
10 ḹm Dhairyākarṣiṇyai Namaḥ - Brave
11 ēm Smṛtyākarṣiṇyai Namaḥ - Memory
12 aim Nāmākarṣiṇyai Namaḥ - Name
13 ōm Bījākarṣiṇyai Namaḥ - Semen
14 aum Ātmākarṣiṇyai Namaḥ - Soul
Amṛtākarṣiṇyai Namaḥ 2 -
15 aḥ
Permanence/Immortality
Śarīrākarṣiṇyai Namaḥ -
16 aḥm
Impermanence/Mortality
In the 3rd Āvaraṇa, the salutations are given in the opposite direction compared to the other āvaraṇas. Our world symbolized within
the 16 petal lotus is left handed. So from here on, everything goes anticlockwise.
6.10 4th Āvaraṇa (Sarva Saubhāgyadāyaka Cakra)
The outer set of 10 triangles represent the five sensory and the five motor organs of the individual. As you are moving out from the
Bindu of the Śrī Cakra, you are moving farther and farther away from yourself, from being the cosmos to being an individual. You
can describe the explosion process of creation in terms of three stages: 1.explosion of the interface, the act of seeing which is
connecting the inside with the outside manifesting the 8 triangles, 2. the explosion of the outer universe manifested in the inner 10
triangles, and 3. the explosion of the inner self, the ego which is the outer 10 triangles of the Śrī Cakra.
Follow the Gods of the 5th Āvaraṇa. Sarvārtha Sādhaka Cakra Svāmini, Kulōttīrṇa Yōginī.
The Wheel which propels you on the righteous path, gives you all Wealth, fulfills all your Desires and makes Liberation possible, the
Yōginī that has graduated out of all classifications.
ĀVARAṆA - 5
Mantra Bījakṣara Nāma
(Placing of 34 Consonants cont’d from previous enclosure till the next: 14 + 10 + 10 = 34 )
Sarva Siddhipradā Devyai Namaḥ Giver of all
1 ṇam
Achievements
Sarva Sampatpradā Devyai Namaḥ Giver of all
2 tam
Wealth
Sarva Priyamkarī Devyai Namaḥ Giver of all that
3 tham
one likes to have
Sarva Maṅgalakāriṇī Devyai Namaḥ Harbinger
4 dam
of all Auspiciousness
Sarva Kāmapradā Devyai Namaḥ Fulfiller of all
5 hsaim hsklīm hssauḥ dham
Desires
Sarvaduḥkha Vimōcinī Devyai Namaḥ
6 nam
Eliminator of all Misery
Sarva Mṛtyu Praśamanī Devyai Namaḥ
7 pam
Eliminator of all Accidental Deaths (also poxes)
Sarva Vighna Nivāriṇī Devyai Namaḥ
8 pham
Eliminator of all Obstacles
Sarvāṅga Sundarī Devyai Namaḥ
9 bam
Beautiful in every part of Her Body
Sarva Saubhāgyadāyinī Devyai Namaḥ
10 bham
Married and Content
If there is an arrow going from inside to outside, it is called an action. You are acting in the world and the world knows about you
through your actions. Supposing the boundary was not there, where is the arrow going, inside or outside? You cannot say, because
there is no inside or outside, if the pot is not there. In that case it is both. What this means that what goes inside, knowledge, is the
same as that which goes outside, action. The fundamental equation Knowledge=Action (K=A) is valid only when the boundary is
absent.
This means that you can create or manifest only when you get rid of your body awareness. As long as your consciousness is limited to
your body awareness, there is no manifestation, and this equation is invalid, because you are able to distinguish K from A. When K
becomes A you of necessity have to get rid of your body awareness. That is called the digambara state. This is where the siddhis
manifest.
As long as you are aware of your body, you are clothed, you have an individual mind, individual thoughts flowing through your
individual mind, you do not have siddhi. Siddhi means the equation K=A. Just by thinking deeply you manifest. There is no
distinction, there is no time gap, and there is no interval between the thought and its creation. That is what we call manifestation. The
necessary and sufficient condition for obtaining any siddhi of any kind is the loss of body awareness. This means we have to stop our
mind from being agitated by external influences. This is why in Devī you find the five senses which are the five arrows. These are the
channels through which your mind can be disturbed. She holds them separate from the mind which is the bow. The bow and the five
arrows, are indeed the mind and the five senses. She holds them separately. She does not connect the arrow to the bow, which means
that Devī represents the yogic state where you decouple your mind from disturbing sensory inputs. But even when this mind is
decoupled from the senses, there is still another part of the mind which is the memory. The memory contains in it all the senses and it
keeps on bringing it up. These also have to be decoupled. The mind itself has to go. It is then that you are flowing in the cosmic
awareness.
The outer set of 10 triangles represent the five sensory and the five motor organs of the individual. As you are moving out from the
Bindu of the Śrī Cakra, you are moving farther and farther away from yourself, from being the cosmos to being an individual.
You can describe the explosion process of creation in terms of three stages:
- The explosion of the interface, the act of seeing which is connecting the inside with the outside manifesting the 8 triangles,
- The explosion of the outer universe manifested in the inner 10 triangles, and
- The explosion of the inner self, the ego which is the outer 10 triangles of the Śrī Cakra.
Follow the Gods of the 6th Enclosure. Sarva Rakṣākara Cakra Svāmini, Nigarbha Yōginī. The Wheel of all Protection, the Yōginī
protecting the child in the womb.
ĀVARAṆA - 6
Mantra Bījakṣara Nāma
(Finish placing the 34 Consonants from previous two enclosures: 14 + 10 + 10 = 34 )
Sarva Jñā Devyai Namaḥ
1 mam
Omniscient
Sarva Śakti Devyai Namaḥ
2 yam
Omnipotent
Sarvaiśvarya Pradā Devyai
3 ram
Namaḥ Omni expressive
Sarva Jñanamayī Devyai Namaḥ
4 lam Providing the Bliss of
Omniscience
Sarva Vyādhi Vināśinī Devyai
5 vam
Namaḥ Eliminating all Maladies
Sarvādhāra Svarūpā Devyai
6 hrīm klīm blēm śam
Namaḥ The Support of all
Sarva Pāpaharā Devyai Namaḥ
7 ṣam The Eliminator of all Notions of
Sin
Sarvānandamayī Devyai Namaḥ
8 sam
All Happiness
Sarva Rakṣā Svarūpiṇī Devyai
9 ham Namaḥ
All Protecting
Sarvēpsita Phalapradā Devyai
10 kṣam Namaḥ Provider of all Desired
Fruits
Expansion of Hrīm is expressed in terms of the 8 groups of letters in Sanskrit starting with am…
kam...cam...ṭam...tam...pam...yam...śam... There is a very nice correlation between the numbers of successive triangles you find in
the Śrī Cakra with the numbers found in the electron shells of the atomic structure. 1, 3, 8, 10, 10, 14. Considering the importance of
Śrī Cakra and the atomic structure, we cannot dismiss this correspondence as a mere chance.
This completes the creation of the elements. The Śrī Cakra represents the microcosm of the atoms, the individual and also the
cosmos. It represents the source of the cosmos, and the gateway to individual life. It is a symbol at three levels.
The expansion process which brings the point to the triangle does not end there because space and time start interacting creating
matter and the expansion process is then shown as 8 triangles, each triangle representing a form of Sarasvatī. Each triangle is a
Yonī. Yonī means a source, a gate, from which life comes. You can also interpret yonī as the cause for time to flow. In a human
metaphor, yonī is the vulva, the gate through which life's journey begins, causing time to flow for an individual. Death is also a yonī;
it causes time to stop for an individual. Cosmos becomes an individual through a Yonī of birth; an individual becomes cosmos through
the Yonī of death.
The flow of time is really a predecessor/successor relationship. This precedes that. This is the cause of that. This present moment is
the cause of the future moment. This continuous relationship of causes to effects is the movement of time. Movement of time is called
Karma. You sow the seed, you reap the fruit accordingly. It is very important to realize that your Karma, the way you experience life,
is not determined by you alone; all life together has a very big part in it. Respect for life is part of good Karma.
As time creates life, and time destroys life too. She is Gaurī the universal mother, the vulva. She is also Kāli the destroyer, the funeral
pyre. Both these aspects are combined into one triangle.
Follow the 8 forms of Sarasvatī (knowledge) in the 7th Enclosure. Originally, the group of letters describing the explosion of the
Cosmos from a point. Sarva Rōgahara Cakra Svāmini, Rahasya Yōginī. The Wheel which eliminates Disease, the Secret Yōginī.
ĀVARAṆA - 7
Mantra Bījakṣara Nāma
16 Vowels and 34 Consonants
am ām im īm um ūm ṛm ṝm
1 ḷm ḹm ēm aim ōm aum aḥ Vaśinī Vāgdēvatāyai Namaḥ - Control
aḥm rblūm
kam kham gam gham ṅam Kāmēśvarī Vāgdēvatāyai Namaḥ -
2
klhrīm Expressive
cam cham jam jham ñam Mōdinī Vāgdēvatāyai Namaḥ -
3
nblīm Pleasure
ṭam ṭham ḍam ḍham ṇam
4 Vimalā Vāgdēvatāyai Namaḥ - Purity
ylūm
hrīm śrīm sauḥ
tam tham dam dham nam
5 Aruṇā Vāgdēvatāyai Namaḥ - Passion
jmrīm
pam pham bam bham mam
6 Jayinī Vāgdēvatāyai Namaḥ - Victory
hslvyūm
Sarvēśvarī Vāgdēvatāyai Namaḥ -
7 yam ram lam vam jhmryūm
Controlling all
śam ṣam sam ham lam Kaulinī Vāgdēvatāyai Namaḥ -
8
kṣam kṣmrīm Enjoying all
Follow the Weapons of the Divine Mother: (Bānini, Cāpini, Pāsini, Aṅkuśini)
Then follow the Goddesses of the 8th Enclosure of the Śrī Cakra. Sarva Siddhiprada Cakra Svāmini, Atirahasya Yōginī. The Wheel
of Realizations, the most Secret Yōginī.
SALUTATIONS to 4 WEAPONS
Give Salutations to these 4 Weapons prior to entering the Yonī
4 Weapons contributing to the Māyā - Elements of Māyā ("Mind")
Weapons Bījakṣara Nāma
Bānini: (Flowers) yam ram lam vam sam sarva jṛmbhaṇēbhyō
The five flowery arrows of drām drīm klīm blūm saḥ kāmēśvarī kāmeśvara
Manmatha called the senses (sound - touch - form - taste - bānēbhyō namaḥ
of smell flower arrows)
i. Sound (music),
1
ii. Touch (eros),
iii.Form (beauty),
iv.Taste (sweetness),
v.Smell (fragrance)
ĀVARAṆA - 8
Mantra Bījakṣara Nāma
ka ē ī la hrīm vam Rajoguṇa Icchā Śakti
Mahā Kāmēśvaryai Namaḥ
1 (Sarasvatī) The Thrust of
God expressing the desire to
see Himself in many Forms
ha sa ka ha la hrīm Jyeṣṭhā Sattvaguṇa Jñāna
Śakti
Mahā Vajrēśvaryai Namaḥ
2 hsraim hsrklīm hsrsauḥ
(Lakṣmī) The Ability to
Obtain the Cosmos in Seed
form
sa ka la hrīm Raudrī Tamoguṇa Kriyā
Śakti
Mahā Bhagamālinyai
3
Namaḥ (Kāli) The Ability to
express the Cosmos out of
the Seed
hsraim hsrklīm hsrsauḥ ētāḥ Atirahasya yōginyaḥ (Name of Yōginī)
Sarva Siddhipradē cakre (Name of Cakra)
Samudrāḥ – sasiddhayaḥ – sāyudhāḥ – saśaktayaḥ – savāhanāh – saparivārāḥ – sarvōpacāraiḥ –
sampūjitāḥ – santarpitāḥ – santuṣtāḥ – santu namaḥ
hsraim hsrklīm hsrsauḥ Tripurāmbā Cakreśvarī Śrī pādukām pūjayāmi tarpayāmi namaḥ
(Controller of the Cakra)
Gandham – puṣpam – dhūpam – dīpam – naivēdyam datva
Aim hrīm śrīm Hsauḥ Sarvabīja mudrām pradarśya (Name of Mudrā)
You can also think of them as the past, the present and the future. Future is dying to create the present moment, and the Present is
dying to create past. The Future is being pushed into the present and the present is being pushed into the past. That is what time is
doing when it is moving. It is manifesting the future and pushing the present into the past. Looking at it another way you can say the
present is the creation of the future and the past is the creation of the present; the identity of two ways of looking at the same process.
Let us then say there is some power inherent in the awareness itself to know itself and that power is manifesting as if there is a
mirror. The mirror is pure that you are not even aware it is in front of you. What you are seeing is a reflection of yourself. That
mirror is called your mind, or the cosmic mind. In the cosmic mind, God reflects his/her own image and reflects on it. God is neither
male nor female nor neuter. All genders are included. Everything, everyone is included in the manifested state. This is true, not only
in the case of the cosmic intelligence, but also of the individual intelligence. Your mind is a mirror in which you are seeing yourself
reflected. No matter how complicated the world seems to be, it is only yourself that you are seeing. No matter how varied it looks
trees, birds, males, females, things, land, sea, sky, sun, moon, stars, galaxies, none of these things existed if you did not exist. For
billions of years you did not exist. Where was this world then?
Existence is awareness. Deny existence itself. Then, can there be awareness? Thus existence implies awareness. Awareness implies
existence too, self evidently. Since these two imply each other, they contain each other. They are not two separate entities, but they are
indeed one and the same entity.
Existence is called Śivā, Awareness is called Śakti. Śivā is therefore called sthāṇu - unmoving. Their unity creates the flow of
experience and the flow of experience is called Bliss Ānanda, or Satcitānanda. You can say that the 3 points of the central triangle
are sat cit and ānanda. You can define it in terms of creation, sustenance and destruction or the Seer, the Seen and the act of Seeing
or the Measurer, the Measured and the act of Measuring. These are the meanings and associations of this triangle.
Now it stands to reason that if there is a centrifugal power in the awareness which explodes this point into a triangle, there must be a
centripetal power that implodes the triangle back into the point.
So far, we have discussed the point and the triangle of the Śrī Cakra. These are the most fundamental things. This itself is a great
Yantrā a point from which universe comes out spiralling and transforms itself into a triangle. It is one of the first seen diagrams,
called Tripura Bhairavī. The triangle is called the yonī, the source, the gate through which everyone comes into being. It is the "I",
the kāmakalā, the desire for variety, the desire for life to experience existence.
"I" plus "A" the Śakti and Śivā*, the triangle and the bindu is the creative power behind the cosmos. This is the explosive, expansive
power of the awareness. To shift itself away from its point of focus is called "Hrīm", and a call back to the center is called "Śrīm".
Both are great powers. "Śrīm" undoes what Hrīm does. The seed letter Hrīm, creates individuation, limiting the cosmic awareness to
individual awareness. The seed letter Śrīm removes limitations and the individual is exploded into cosmic awareness. Hrīm and Śrīm
are inverse operators.
*How "I" plus "A" the Śakti and Śivā corresponds to "Hrīm" and "Śrīm":
"I" is icchā, the desire of Goddess to show Śivā to himself as many. It is the fourth the long bīja "I".
"I" is also called the Mahā gupta sārasvata bīja which can take you to the turīya, the fourth state of awareness called samādhi. It is
equivalent to "Hrīm".
"A", the first letter is nirguṇa, Śivā tattva. "Śrīm" takes you to identity with Śivā, inverse of "Hrīm". śruti says: akāro nirguṇo
hyātma.
"Ōm"(=A+U+m) is the name of God. We say "Ōm Hrīm Śrīm" as a mantra to imply that the world came out of God and is going
back to it. Hrīm is the power that makes the point into the triangle and Śrīm is the power which collapses the triangle back to into the
point.
Interestingly, Ōm consists of the seed letters A+ U+ M. Just a cyclic permutation U+M+A reads as Uma. Ōm is the name of Śivā and
Uma is the name of Śakti. It is just two ways of looking at the same entity. If we begin with existence A, it looks like Śivā; if we begin
with awareness U, it looks like Śakti.
6.15 9th Āvaraṇa (Sarvānandamaya Cakra)
The Bindu
The center of every experience is yourself. That is Śivā, called the invariant point, bindu. The word
bindu means three things: point, seed and mind. All that is experienced is Śakti. The function of
Śivā is to unite you, that you are, into the cosmic being. The function of Śakti is to separate you
from being Śivā to bring an experience to that awareness, flowing and movement in time. Śivā is the
awareness full of experience that flows not in time. It is a frozen experience that has no evolution.
The first movement (in time and space) is the creation of an interval - an interval between the
knower and the known, between the seer and the seen, between the one which is aware and that of
which it is aware. The chaitanya and jaḍa. Jaḍa is what you are seeing, which you are not
penetrating. It is something that somehow separates itself from itself and this separation manifests
itself as an interval between the seer and the seen. This is the birth of relativity/relativeness.
This interval can be compared to the distance between a point and its image in the mirror. A point is
dimensionless. The point is reflected in a mirror and it appears as if it is another point unto itself.
The first point, the second point, and the distance between these two points exist, connected by the
space (distance) and time (required by light to cover the distance) interval. Once the space time
interval is formed, something has to have the property of movement. Time is the one which has the
characteristic of movement. This statement is not absolutely true, but is a good first approximation.
(It is equally proper to say that space, not time has the property of movement). However, our
experience tells us that it is the time which is moving and space is not moving and this experience is
valid in a sufficiently large number of cases so that we can accept that it appears to be true. This
law breaks down as you are approaching the velocity of light. That is where the relativistic theory
takes over.
The space time interval is the first creation and that manifests itself as interaction between space
and time and out of the rotation of space around time matter is formed. The bindu, the center point
is unique, it is dimensionless, it is awareness, but it is not even aware of itself. So it cannot be even
called a creator. It is a liṅga, a characteristic of invariance. It is awareness and nonawareness
combined. What you see and what you are is combined in that.
Knowledge and ignorance are combined in that. It is not negatible. It is invariant to negation. If you
have knowledge alone and when you negate it you have ignorance. When you have ignorance alone
and negate it, it becomes knowledge. But when you have the sum of the two and you try to negate the
sum, knowledge moves over to ignorance and ignorance moves over to knowledge and the sum total
is not changed even when you deny it. It cannot be denied. It is selfevident. It is your own knowledge
that you exist. It does not have to be proved to you. The awareness has this property of selfproving,
svaprakāśa. Awareness is self enlightening; that does not require another light to show its existence,
it is proof unto itself. That pure awareness is God.
What is to be enlightened is our own ignorance. What is ignorance? One sees the world and what is
seen appears different from oneself. If illumination is there then this difference will not exist.
Absorption of the interval back into the point is the function of Śivā. Creation of the interval is the
function of Śakti. They are opposites of each other. Śivā kills your individuality to make you the
Cosmic Being. In being a killer, Śivā is giving you birth into your cosmic consciousness. Śakti is
trying to limit your cosmic consciousness into your individual consciousness and therefore Śakti
appears to give life. Śivā appears to give death. What we interpret as death is the cosmic awareness.
What we interpret as life is the cosmic death. These are the functions of the two creators, Śivā and
Śakti. They are cocreators and they have equal potency and equal powers. This is the Śivā Śakti
identity.
ĀVARAṆA - 9
Mantra Nāma
śrīm hrīm klīm aim sauḥ
ōm hrīm śrīm Śrī Śrī Mahā Tripurasundarī Parā Bhaṭṭārikayai
1
'pañcadaśī' Namaḥ
sauḥ aim klīm hrīm śrīm
hasakala hasakahala sakalahrīm
śrīm hrīm klīm aim sauḥ ōm hrīm śrīm 'pañcadaśī' sauḥ aim klīm hrīm śrīm
hasakala hasakahala sakalahrīm
Yōginīs
1. Aim hrīm śrīm Prakaṭa Yōginī nāthāya namaḥ
2. Aim hrīm śrīm Gupta Yōginī nāthāya namaḥ
3. Aim hrīm śrīm Guptatara Yōginī nāthāya namaḥ
4. Aim hrīm śrīm Sampradāya Yōginī nāthāya namaḥ
5. Aim hrīm śrīm Kulōttīrṇa Yōginī nāthāya namaḥ
6. Aim hrīm śrīm Nigarbha Yōginī nāthāya namaḥ
7. Aim hrīm śrīm Rahasya Yōginī nāthāya namaḥ
8. Aim hrīm śrīm Atirahasya Yōginī nāthāya namaḥ
9. Aim hrīm śrīm Parāparā Atirahasya Yōginī nāthāya namaḥ
36 Tattvas
1. Aim hrīm śrīm prakṛti lińgāya namaḥ
2. Aim hrīm śrīm ahaṃkāra lińgāya namaḥ
3. Aim hrīm śrīm buddhi lińgāya namaḥ
4. Aim hrīm śrīm mano lińgāya namaḥ
5. Aim hrīm śrīm śrotra lińgāya namaḥ
6. Aim hrīm śrīm tvak lińgāya namaḥ
7. Aim hrīm śrīm cakṣu lińgāya namaḥ
8. Aim hrīm śrīm jihva lińgāya namaḥ
9. Aim hrīm śrīm ghrāṇa lińgāya namaḥ
10. Aim hrīm śrīm vāk lińgāya namaḥ
11. Aim hrīm śrīm pāni lińgāya namaḥ
12. Aim hrīm śrīm pāda lińgāya namaḥ
13. Aim hrīm śrīm pāyu lińgāya namaḥ
14. Aim hrīm śrīm upastha lińgāya namaḥ
15. Aim hrīm śrīm śabda lińgāya namaḥ
16. Aim hrīm śrīm sparśa lińgāya namaḥ
17. Aim hrīm śrīm rūpa lińgāya namaḥ
18. Aim hrīm śrīm rasa lińgāya namaḥ
19. Aim hrīm śrīm gandha lińgāya namaḥ
20. Aim hrīm śrīm ākāśa lińgāya namaḥ
21. Aim hrīm śrīm vāyu lińgāya namaḥ
22. Aim hrīm śrīm vahni lińgāya namaḥ
23. Aim hrīm śrīm salila lińgāya namaḥ
24. Aim hrīm śrīm bhūmi lińgāya namaḥ
25. Aim hrīm śrīm māyā lińgāya namaḥ
26. Aim hrīm śrīm kalā lińgāya namaḥ
27. Aim hrīm śrīm vidyā lińgāya namaḥ
28. Aim hrīm śrīm rāga lińgāya namaḥ
29. Aim hrīm śrīm kāla lińgāya namaḥ
30. Aim hrīm śrīm niyati lińgāya namaḥ
31. Aim hrīm śrīm puruṣa lińgāya namaḥ
32. Aim hrīm śrīm śiva lińgāya namaḥ
33. Aim hrīm śrīm śakti lińgāya namaḥ
34. Aim hrīm śrīm sadāśiva lińgāya namaḥ
35. Aim hrīm śrīm īśvara namaḥ
36. Aim hrīm śrīm śuddha vidyā namaḥ
Mahāvākyas
Aim hrīm śrīm Ōm Prājṇānām Brahma, Ōm Ayam Ātma Brahma, Ōm Tat tvam asi, Ōm Aham
Brahmasmi, Sōham Lińgāya namaḥ
Guru Maṇḍalas
Aim hrīm śrīm Śrī Guru Lińgāya namaḥ
Aim hrīm śrīm Parama Guru Lińgāya namaḥ
Aim hrīm śrīm Paramēṣṭhi Guru Lińgāya namaḥ
Aim hrīm śrīm Parātpara Guru Lińgāya namaḥ
Navagrahas
1. Aim hrīm śrīm Sūrya Lińgāya namaḥ
2. Aim hrīm śrīm Sōma Lińgāya namaḥ
3. Aim hrīm śrīm Kuja Lińgāya namaḥ
4. Aim hrīm śrīm Saumya Lińgāya namaḥ
5. Aim hrīm śrīm Guru Lińgāya namaḥ
6. Aim hrīm śrīm Śukra Lińgāya namaḥ
7. Aim hrīm śrīm Śānaiścara Lińgāya namaḥ
8. Aim hrīm śrīm Rāhu Lińgāya namaḥ
9. Aim hrīm śrīm Ketu Lińgāya namaḥ
Sampradāyas
1. Aim hrīm śrīm Samayācāra Nidhaye namaḥ
2. Aim hrīm śrīm Kaulacāra Nidhaye namaḥ
The first offering is gandham sandalwood paste. The Sanskrit is "Lalitāyai satsaṅgam gandham kalpayāmi namaḥ." Satsaṅgam
means association with the truth. What you are saying is Let the sweet perfume smell of our association with the truth be as
sandalwood offered in my mind to your lotus feet.
If you look at the Five Offerings for Devī you will see "Lam Lalitāyai satsaṅgam gandham kalpayāmi namaḥ". ‘Lam’ is the bīja
associated with the Mūlādhārā cakra*. And there is offered satsaṅgam association with the truth, association with the light, harmony,
grace. These positive aspects are the gandham. You offer her the perfumed scents. The Mūlādhārā is concerned with security. Your
security has to be purified so that it can expand to security for the entire planet. Wherever you find a flow, admiration of nature's
beauty, a dance, a song, some music, discussions on truth, that is satsaṅgam.
Yam* Lalitāyai Kāma Krodha Lobha Moha Mada Mātsarya Puṇya Pāpa Visarjanam Dhūpam
Kalpayāmi Namaḥ - (offer incense)
Shedding internal enemies and bondages is dhūpam.
The third offering is dhūpam, incense. Lalitāyai kāma krodha lobha moha mada mātsarya puṇya pāpa visarjanam dhūpam
kalpayāmi namaḥ. The incense is leaving the passions for lust, greed, etc. and the notions of punya - virtue and papa - sin behind,
letting them be burnt up as the incense stick is burnt up.
Puṇya pāpa visarjanam dhūpam kalpayāmi the elimination of kāma krodha lobha moha mada mātsarya (lust, anger, delusion,
pride, jealousy and all negative traits). The smoke that comes out from the incense symbolizes all these things coming out of the heart
center. ‘Yam’ is the bīja associated with the anāhatā cakra *.
The next offering is dīpam the light. What is the light we are offering? You offer dīpam light. Lalitāyai citkala darśanam dīpam
kalpayāmi namaḥ. Cit means awareness kala is the lights in the awareness in the mind's eye; when you close your eyes and you are
seeing the lights within, it is those lights which you offer to the Devī.
Also, when you close you eyes in meditation, the lights that you see are the lights that you are giving as the offering to Devī.
Vam* Lalitāyai Vasudādi Śivāvasanam Śivā Śakti Sāmarasyam Naivēdyam Kalpayāmi Namaḥ –
(offer Naivēdyam)
Seer is Śivā, seen is Śakti - their union, samādhi is Naivēdyam - the bliss of intercourse between
God and Jīva is offered as Naivēdyam. Everything that one sees, knows, and experiences - is offered
to Goddess.
Naivēdyam is food. Lalitāyai vasudādi śivāvasanam śivā śakti samarasyam naivēdyam kalpayāmi namaḥ. To Lalitā, vasudādi
starting from the earth, śivāvasanam in all the elements, in all the cakras, Śivā is the seer and Śakti is the known, the modified and
unmodified awarenesses, their union (sāmarasyam) is to be offered as a food offering. The union between the seer and the seen is the
food offering. The nectar that is offered is the nectar from the union of Śivā and Śakti.
Sam* Lalitāyai Manolaya Svarūpa ānanda karpūra Nīrājanam Kalpayāmi Namaḥ - (offer
Camphor)
Dissolution of mind step by step by not smelling, tasting, seeing, touching, hearing is creating a
bliss. That bliss is the meaning of Nīrājanam.
Karpūra – camphor. Lalitāyai manolaya Svarūpa ānanda karpūra Nīrājanam kalpayāmi namaḥ. Manolaya is the elimination of the
mind; that is the state of bliss. Like the camphor that burns and eliminates itself, we offer the elimination of all thoughts from the
mind to the Devī.
Lalitāyai Upaniṣad vākya surabhilam tāmbūlam kalpayāmi namaḥ. The Upaniṣads are the parts of the Vēdas that deal with
knowledge. Vāk means the sentences. Surabhilam is perfumed. The perfumed speech at the end of the Vēdas relating to knowledge
that is offered as the mouth freshing pan to Devī.
This is (i) to give life to kśetrapālakā - the protector of the field and (ii) to propitiate evil-mongering
spirits or forces not to trouble the devotee.
Bali Dānam - In this last part of the pūjā, you give a food offering to the Kśetrapālakā the Deities that protect the field, the location
where the pūjā is being held. You are also giving to the evil mongering spirits or forces that exist all around us so that they do not
trouble the devotees performing the pūjā.
You draw the diagram on the floor in front of the Devī using the sāmānyārghyam water the triangle surrounded by the circle and a
square. While drawing you recite "Aim Vyāpaka maṇḍalāya namaḥ". On top of the diagram you place a small plate or vessel,
preferably of copper and put a sampling of each of the food offerings given to the Devī on the plate, and pour water on top of it.
Then you say the following mantra: Ōm hrīm sarva vighnakṛdbhyaḥ sarva bhūtēbhyo hum phat svāhā.
Sarva vighnakṛdbhyaḥ all those who are creating obstacles; sarva bhūtēbhyo all the elements which are creating the trouble; hum
svāhā I say hum and offer them to the fire. The word Hum has a special meaning. It is called a kurcha bīja. When you hold your
breath and push it down as if you were going to eliminate your bowels, then you feel after a little while the rush of blood coming up to
the face. The face will flush with the blood. That is the hum.
When you say hum phat svāhā, and do it long enough, the phat is the sound of explosion when the blood rushes to your head and you
lose your body, you pass out. You are dead. This is the way the yogis die. They hold their breath, push it down and then the blood
rushes up. The head is fully energized in a super conscious state and it blows up like a coconut and the waters flow out to Śivā. This is
the secret of the Hum Phat Svāhā mantra. Svāhā is what you offer to the fire. Phat is the explosive sound. When you offer the body to
the fire, you are dead. In a sense, Phat and Svāhā are the same thing; when you say one, you don't have to say the other.
Then you clap three times - for those relating to the body, the elements and to the astral entities. Adiātmikā, adibhūtika and
adidaivika are the three disturbing elements you try to eliminate.
6.20 To Finish the Pūjā
Etat Pūjāphalam
Sarvam Śrī Paradevatārpaṇamastu.
Parameśwarārpaṇamastu.
Guru Devatārpaṇamastu.
Svātmārpaṇamastu.
So saying, leave akśatās and water near Meru; place the prasādam of Devī
on your head.
To offer anything to God, a pūjā, a karma, how do we offer? We offer with the seed and water. Akśatās, the rice grains represent the seed.
These, along with water you pour over the Meru Śrī Cakra.
Etat Pūjāphalam - The fruit of this pūjā;
Sarvam Śrī Paradevatārpaṇamastu - along with water may it be offered to the transcendental Goddess;
Parameśwarārpaṇamastu - to the father God, Śivā;
Guru Devatārpaṇamastu - to the Guru who is the living God, we offer;
Svātmārpaṇamastu - I offer to myself.
At the end of the pūjā you pick up the vessel containing the viśēṣārghyām, put it on top of your head and then show it three times to Devī.
After this you distribute the nectar to the devotees.
7.1 Akṣa-Mālā
7.2.1 Ṣōḍaśi
śrīm hrīm klīm aim sauḥ, ōm hrīm śrīm, ka ē ī la hrīm, ha sa ka ha la hrīm, sa ka la hrīm, sauḥ aim
klīm hrīm śrīm
Nyāsa
Āvaraṇa-1
(Outer Square)
1. Aim hrīm śrīm am Aṇimā Siddhyai Namaḥ Śrīm
2. Aim hrīm śrīm lam Laghimā Siddhyai Namaḥ
3. Aim hrīm śrīm mam Mahimā Siddhyai Namaḥ
4. Aim hrīm śrīm īm Īśitva Siddhyai Namaḥ Śrīm
5. Aim hrīm śrīm vam Vaśitva Siddhyai Namaḥ Śrīm
6. Aim hrīm śrīm Prākāmya Siddhyai Namaḥ
pam
Śrīm
7. Aim hrīm śrīm bhum Bhukti Siddhyai Namaḥ Śrīm
8. Aim hrīm śrīm im Icchā Siddhyai Namaḥ Śrīm
9. Aim hrīm śrīm pam Prāpti Siddhyai Namaḥ Śrīm
10. Aim hrīm śrīm Sarvakāma Siddhyai Namaḥ
sam
Śrīm
(Middle Square)
1. Aim hrīm śrīm ām Brāhmyai Namaḥ Śrīm
2. Aim hrīm śrīm īm Māhēśvaryai Namaḥ Śrīm
3. Aim hrīm śrīm ūm Kaumāryai Namaḥ Śrīm
4. Aim hrīm śrīm ṝm Vaiṣṇavyai Namaḥ Śrīm
5. Aim hrīm śrīm ḹm Vārāhyai Namaḥ Śrīm
6. Aim hrīm śrīm aim Māhēndrīyai Namaḥ Śrīm
7. Aim hrīm śrīm aum Camuṇdayai Namaḥ Śrīm
8. Aim hrīm śrīm aḥm Mahālakṣmyai Namaḥ Śrīm
(Inner Square)
1. Aim hrīm śrīm Sarva Samkṣōbhiṇyai Namaḥ
Drām
Śrīm
2. Aim hrīm śrīm Drīm Sarva Vidrāviṇyai Namaḥ Śrīm
3. Aim hrīm śrīm Klīm Sarvākarṣiṇyai Namaḥ Śrīm
4. Aim hrīm śrīm Sarva Vaśamkaryai Namaḥ
Blūm
Śrīm
5. Aim hrīm śrīm Saḥ Sarvōnmādinyai Namaḥ Śrīm
6. Aim hrīm śrīm Sarva Mahāṅkuśāyai Namaḥ
Krōm
Śrīm
7. Aim hrīm śrīm Hskphrēm Sarva Khēcaryai Namaḥ Śrīm
8. Aim hrīm śrīm Hsaum Sahauḥ Sarva Bījayai Namaḥ Śrīm
9. Aim hrīm śrīm Aim Sarva Yonyai Namaḥ Śrīm
10. Aim hrīm śrīm Sarva Trikhaṇḍāyai Namaḥ
Hsraim Hsrklīm Hsrsauḥ
Śrīm
(Salutations to Cakreśvarī and Yōginī in charge)
1. Aim hrīm śrīm am ām sauḥ Trailōkya mōhana Cakra
Swaminyai Namaḥ Śrīm
2. Aim hrīm śrīm śrīm hrīm klīm aim sauḥ, ōm Prakaṭa Yōginyai Namaḥ Śrīm
hrīm śrīm, ka ē ī la hrīm, ha
sa ka ha la hrīm, sa ka la
hrīm, sauḥ aim klīm hrīm śrīm
Āvaraṇa-2
(16-petals)
1. Aim hrīm śrīm am Kāmākarṣiṇyai Namaḥ Śrīm
2. Aim hrīm śrīm ām Buddhyākarṣiṇyai Namaḥ Śrīm
3. Aim hrīm śrīm im Ahamkārākarṣiṇyai Namaḥ
Śrīm
4. Aim hrīm śrīm īm Śabdākarṣiṇyai Namaḥ Śrīm
5. Aim hrīm śrīm um Sparśākarṣiṇyai Namaḥ Śrīm
6. Aim hrīm śrīm ūm Rūpākarṣiṇyai Namaḥ Śrīm
7. Aim hrīm śrīm ṛm Rasākarṣiṇyai Namaḥ Śrīm
8. Aim hrīm śrīm ṝm Gandhākarṣiṇyai Namaḥ Śrīm
9. Aim hrīm śrīm ḷm Cittākarṣiṇyai Namaḥ Śrīm
10. Aim hrīm śrīm ḹm Dhairyākarṣiṇyai Namaḥ Śrīm
11. Aim hrīm śrīm ēm Smṛtyākarṣiṇyai Namaḥ Śrīm
12. Aim hrīm śrīm aim Nāmākarṣiṇyai Namaḥ Śrīm
13. Aim hrīm śrīm ōm Bījākarṣiṇyai Namaḥ Śrīm
14. Aim hrīm śrīm aum Ātmākarṣiṇyai Namaḥ Śrīm
15. Aim hrīm śrīm aḥ Amṛtākarṣiṇyai Namaḥ Śrīm
16. Aim hrīm śrīm aḥm Śarīrākarṣiṇyai Namaḥ Śrīm
(Salutations to Cakreśvarī and Yōginī in charge)
1. Aim hrīm śrīm aim klīm sauḥ Sarvāśā paripūraka Cakra
Swaminyai Namaḥ Śrīm
2. Aim hrīm śrīm śrīm hrīm klīm aim sauḥ, Gupta Yōginyai Namaḥ Śrīm
ōm hrīm śrīm, ka ē ī la hrīm,
ha sa ka ha la hrīm, sa ka la
hrīm, sauḥ aim klīm hrīm śrīm
Āvaraṇa-3
(8-petals)
1. Aim hrīm śrīm kam kham gam gham ṅam Anaṅga Kusumāyai Namaḥ
Śrīm
2. Aim hrīm śrīm cam cham jam jham ñam Anaṅga Mēkhalāyai Namaḥ
Śrīm
3. Aim hrīm śrīm ṭam ṭham ḍam ḍham ṇam Anaṅga Madanāyai Namaḥ
Śrīm
4. Aim hrīm śrīm tam tham dam dham nam Anaṅga Madanāturāyai Namaḥ
Śrīm
5. Aim hrīm śrīm pam pham bam bham mam Anaṅga Rēkhāyai Namaḥ Śrīm
6. Aim hrīm śrīm yam ram lam vam Anaṅga Vēginyai Namaḥ Śrīm
7. Aim hrīm śrīm śam ṣam sam ham Anaṅgāṅkuśāyai Namaḥ Śrīm
8. Aim hrīm śrīm lam kṣam Anaṅga Mālinyai Namaḥ Śrīm
(Salutations to Cakreśvarī and Yōginī in charge)
1. Aim hrīm śrīm hrīm klīm sauḥ Sarvasamkṣōbhaṇa Cakra
Swaminyai Namaḥ Śrīm
2. Aim hrīm śrīm śrīm hrīm klīm aim sauḥ, Guptatara Yōginyai Namaḥ
ōm hrīm śrīm, ka ē ī la hrīm, Śrīm
ha sa ka ha la hrīm, sa ka la
hrīm, sauḥ aim klīm hrīm śrīm
Āvaraṇa-4
(14-triangles)
1. Aim hrīm śrīm kam Sarva Samkṣōbhiṇyai Namaḥ
Śrīm
2. Aim hrīm śrīm kham Sarva Vidrāvinyai Namaḥ Śrīm
3. Aim hrīm śrīm gam Sarvā-Karṣiṇyai Namaḥ Śrīm
4. Aim hrīm śrīm gham Sarvā-Hlādinyai Namaḥ Śrīm
5. Aim hrīm śrīm ṅam Sarva Sammōhinyai Namaḥ
Śrīm
6. Aim hrīm śrīm cam Sarva Stambhinyai Namaḥ
Śrīm
7. Aim hrīm śrīm cham Sarva Jṛmbhinyai Namaḥ Śrīm
8. Aim hrīm śrīm jam Sarva Vaśamkaryai Namaḥ
Śrīm
9. Aim hrīm śrīm jham Sarva Rañjinyai Namaḥ Śrīm
10. Aim hrīm śrīm ñam Sarvōnmādinyai Namaḥ Śrīm
11. Aim hrīm śrīm ṭam Sarvārthasādhinyai Namaḥ
Śrīm
12. Aim hrīm śrīm ṭham Sarva Sampattipūraṇyai
Namaḥ Śrīm
13. Aim hrīm śrīm ḍam Sarva Mantramayyai Namaḥ
Śrīm
14. Aim hrīm śrīm ḍham Sarva Dvandva Kṣayamkaryai
Namaḥ Śrīm
(Salutations to Cakreśvarī and Yōginī in charge)
1. Aim hrīm śrīm haim hklīm hsauḥ Sarva Saubhāgyadāyaka Cakra
Swaminyai Namaḥ Śrīm
2. Aim hrīm śrīm śrīm hrīm klīm aim sauḥ ōm Sampradāya Yōginyai Namaḥ
hrīm śrīm, ka ē ī la hrīm, ha Śrīm
sa ka ha la hrīm, sa ka la
hrīm, sauḥ aim klīm hrīm śrīm
Āvaraṇa-5
(10-triangles)
1. Aim hrīm śrīm ṇam Sarva Siddhipradāyai Namaḥ
Śrīm
2. Aim hrīm śrīm tam Sarva Sampatpradāyai Namaḥ
Śrīm
3. Aim hrīm śrīm tham Sarva Priyamkaryai Namaḥ
Śrīm
4. Aim hrīm śrīm dam Sarva Maṅgalakāriṇyai Namaḥ
Śrīm
5. Aim hrīm śrīm dham Sarva Kāmapradāyai Namaḥ
Śrīm
6. Aim hrīm śrīm nam Sarvaduḥkha Vimōcinyai
Namaḥ Śrīm
7. Aim hrīm śrīm pam Sarva Mṛtyu Praśamanyai
Namaḥ Śrīm
8. Aim hrīm śrīm pham Sarva Vighna Nivāriṇyai
Namaḥ Śrīm
9. Aim hrīm śrīm bam Sarvāṅga Sundaryai Namaḥ
Śrīm
10. Aim hrīm śrīm bham Sarva Saubhāgyadāyinyai
Namaḥ Śrīm
(Salutations to Cakreśvarī and Yōginī in charge)
1. Aim hrīm śrīm hsaim hsklīm hssauḥ Sarvārtha Sādhaka Cakra
Swaminyai Namaḥ Śrīm
2. Aim hrīm śrīm śrīm hrīm klīm aim sauḥ, ōm Kulōttīrṇa Yōginyai Namaḥ
hrīm śrīm, ka ē ī la hrīm, ha Śrīm
sa ka ha la hrīm, sa ka la
hrīm, sauḥ aim klīm hrīm śrīm
Āvaraṇa-6
(10-triangles)
1. Aim hrīm śrīm mam Sarva Jñāyai Namaḥ Śrīm
2. Aim hrīm śrīm yam Sarva Śaktyai Namaḥ Śrīm
3. Aim hrīm śrīm ram Sarvaiśvarya Pradāyai Namaḥ
Śrīm
4. Aim hrīm śrīm lam Sarva Jñanamayyai Namaḥ
Śrīm
5. Aim hrīm śrīm vam Sarva Vyādhi Vināśinyai
Namaḥ Śrīm
6. Aim hrīm śrīm śam Sarvādhāra Svarūpāyai Namaḥ
Śrīm
7. Aim hrīm śrīm ṣam Sarva Pāpaharāyai Namaḥ
Śrīm
8. Aim hrīm śrīm sam Sarvānandamayyai Namaḥ
Śrīm
9. Aim hrīm śrīm ham Sarva Rakṣā Svarūpiṇyai
Namaḥ Śrīm
10. Aim hrīm śrīm kṣam Sarvēpsita Phalapradāyai
Namaḥ Śrīm
(Salutations to Cakreśvarī and Yōginī in charge)
1. Aim hrīm śrīm hrīm klīm blēm Sarva Rakṣākara Cakra
Swaminyai Namaḥ Śrīm
2. Aim hrīm śrīm śrīm hrīm klīm aim sauḥ, ōm Nigarbha Yōginyai Namaḥ
hrīm śrīm, ka ē ī la hrīm, ha Śrīm
sa ka ha la hrīm, sa ka la
hrīm, sauḥ aim klīm hrīm śrīm
Āvaraṇa-7
(8-triangles)
1. Aim hrīm śrīm am ām im īm um ūm rblūm Sarva Jñāyai Namaḥ Śrīm
ṛm ṝm ḷm ḹm ēm aim
ōm aum aḥ aḥm
2. Aim hrīm śrīm kam kham gam klhrīm Kāmēśvaryai Namaḥ Śrīm
gham ṅam
3. Aim hrīm śrīm cam cham jam jham nblīm Mōdinyai Namaḥ Śrīm
ñam
4. Aim hrīm śrīm ṭam ṭham ḍam ḍham ylūm Vimalāyai Namaḥ Śrīm
ṇam
5. Aim hrīm śrīm tam tham dam dham jmrīm Aruṇāyai Namaḥ Śrīm
nam
6. Aim hrīm śrīm pam pham bam hslvyūm Jayinyai Namaḥ Śrīm
bham mam
7. Aim hrīm śrīm yam ram lam vam jhmryūm Sarvēśvaryai Namaḥ Śrīm
8. Aim hrīm śrīm śam ṣam sam ham kṣmrīm Kaulinyai Namaḥ Śrīm
lam kṣam
(Salutations to Cakreśvarī and Yōginī in charge)
1. Aim hrīm śrīm hrīm śrīm sauḥ Sarva Rōgahara Cakra
Swaminyai Namaḥ Śrīm
2. Aim hrīm śrīm śrīm hrīm klīm aim sauḥ, ōm Rahasya Yōginyai Namaḥ Śrīm
hrīm śrīm, ka ē ī la hrīm, ha
sa ka ha la hrīm, sa ka la
hrīm, sauḥ aim klīm hrīm śrīm
Āvaraṇa-8
(Salutations to weapons)
1. Aim hrīm śrīm yam ram lam vam sam drām Bāninyai Namaḥ Śrīm
drīm klīm blūm saḥ
2. Aim hrīm śrīm ṭham ḍham Sarva Sammōhinyai Cāpinyai
Namaḥ Śrīm
3. Aim hrīm śrīm hrīm ām Pāsinyai Namaḥ Śrīm
4. Aim hrīm śrīm krōm krōm Aṅkuśinyai Namaḥ Śrīm
(Main Triangle)
1. Aim hrīm śrīm śrīm hrīm klīm aim sauḥ, ōm Mahā Kāmēśvaryai Namaḥ
hrīm śrīm Śrīm
2. Aim hrīm śrīm ka ē ī la hrīm, ha sa ka ha la Mahā Vajrēśvaryai Namaḥ
hrīm Śrīm
3. Aim hrīm śrīm sa ka la hrīm, sauḥ aim klīm Mahā Bhagamālinyai Namaḥ
hrīm śrīm Śrīm
(Salutations to Cakreśvarī and Yōginī in charge)
1. Aim hrīm śrīm hsraim hsrklīm hsrsauḥ Sarva Siddhiprada Cakra
Swaminyai Namaḥ Śrīm
2. Aim hrīm śrīm śrīm hrīm klīm aim sauḥ, ōm Atirahasya Yōginyai Namaḥ
hrīm śrīm, ka ē ī la hrīm, ha Śrīm
sa ka ha la hrīm, sa ka la
hrīm, sauḥ aim klīm hrīm śrīm
Āvaraṇa-9
(Bindu)
1. Aim hrīm śrīm śrīm hrīm klīm aim sauḥ, ōm Śrī Śrī Mahā Bhaṭṭārikayai
hrīm śrīm, ka ē ī la hrīm, ha Namaḥ Śrīm
sa ka ha la hrīm, sa ka la
hrīm, sauḥ aim klīm hrīm śrīm
Hsaum |
ōm, aim hrīm śrīm, aim klīm sauḥ |
aim glaum sauḥ |
Hamsaḥ Śivaḥ Sōham, Hskphrēm |
ka ē ī la hrīm, ha sa ka ha la hrīm, sa ka la hrīm |
hasakala hrīm, hasakahala hrīm, sakala hrīm |
Ōm Prājṇānām Brahma, Ōm Ayam Ātma Brahma, Ōm Tat tvam asi, Ōm
Aham Brahmasmi |
Hasakṣamalavarayūm Hsaum, Sahakṣamalavarayīm Sahauḥ |
Śrī Guru, Parama Guru, Paramēṣṭhi Guru, (Divya Guru), Śrī Pādukām Pūjayāmi Tarpayāmi Namaḥ|
Hsaum |
Sahauḥ |
ōm, aim hrīm śrīm, aim klīm sauḥ |
aim glaum sauḥ |
Hamsaḥ Śivaḥ Sōham, Hskphrēm|
ka ē ī la hrīm, ha sa ka ha la hrīm, sa ka la hrīm |
hasakala hrīm, hasakahala hrīm, sakala hrīm |
Ōm Prājṇānām Brahma, Ōm Ayam Ātma Brahma, Ōm Tat tvam asi, Ōm Aham Brahmasmi |
Hasakṣamalavarayūm Hsaum, Sahakṣamalavarayīm Sahauḥ |
Śrī Guru, Parama Guru, Paramēṣṭhi Guru, (Divya Guru), Śrī Pādukām Pūjayāmi Tarpayāmi Namaḥ|
Sahauḥ ||
ŌM
After these sixty four offerings (upacāras), you have brought Her close to you and you have embraced Her. This embrace has been so deep
that She has penetrated your body and is residing there in the lotus of your heart as a golden girl 16 years old. That transformation has
happened. Your bodies have not remained separate. They have merged into one. That is the Yab-Yum, Śivā and Śakti. Yab-Yum is female-male
in union similar to Yin-Yang. The concept of this union is the final step. It is the Śakti Pūjā. In the ritual there is no union. There is no union,
because you are adoring the Mother. For the purpose of your pleasure, your happiness and enjoyment you are thinking of Devī as different
from you and so you are able to adore Her. Like a child we make believe in these Gods and Goddesses in front of us. And the magic is that
they become real. We worship them and then we bring them back into ourselves. This is the notion of the pūjā, which is a total absorption into
the other, the divine.
The Devī pūjā has to be done in Advaita. That is the only way it can be done. Because She is all power, and it needs to be controlled.
Otherwise it is like driving a high powered car with the accelerator but no steering wheel. You are bound to end up in a disaster. You have to
have a steering wheel to control the way you are going, no matter what speed. The more speed, the more control you must have.
Without discipline you cannot achieve what you want. The more power you have, the more control you must have over your
tongue because what you are going to say is going to come true. You cannot afford to say bad things even in dreams. You have to have
that much control over your behavior. These are the various aspects of tantrā, at a glance.
8.1 Part-I: Amṛtīkaraṇam
Saṅkalpam
|| Ōm Śrī Gurubhyo namaḥ ||
|| Śrī Mahā Gaṇapathaye namaḥ ||
|| Śrī Mātre namaḥ ||
|| Ōm Śrī Lalitā Mahā Tripurasundarī Devī Sahita Śrī Amṛtānanda Śrī Guru paripūrṇa kaṭākṣa
siddhirastu ||
mama ________ gotravati _______ nāma deyavati,
kumārī kalyāṇa (or suvāsini sukha bhoga samṛddhi or anyonya dāmpatya) satsantāna siddhyartham,
sarveśām janānām sakala roga pīḍā nivṛtyartham,
dīrgha āyuḥ ārogya aiśvarya samasta sanmaṅgala avāptyartham,
deha devālaye amṛtīkaraṇa prokṣaṇa aṅga pūjā ceṭī
triveṇī kalpōkta vidhānena anyonya sahāyena kariṣyāmaḥ.
|| Śrī Guru paradevatā prasaada siddhirastu.
Iti bhavantu mahānto anugṛhāṇantu. Tathāstu.
Śrī Gurubhyo Namaḥ.
Hariḥ Ōm ||
Pūjā:
|| Drām śabda rūpāya guruvē namaḥ, iti kaṇṭhe ||
Chant "ōm ām hrīm krōm ēhēhi Dattātreyāya svāhā" on 16 petals of Viśuddhi Cakra in
the neck, going in clockwise direction, vibrating each petal one by one.
(4 Petals per quadrant).
|| akhaṇdaika rasānanda karē parasudhātmani svacchanda sphuraṇām ātra nidhēhi akula nāyikē
namaḥ. Śivā pāda-amṛtam śirasi āvāhayāmi ||
(Invoke nectar from right foot (Śivā's foot) on the head)
|| akulasthāmṛta ākārē śuddha jñāna karē parē amṛtatvam nidhēhi asmin vastuni klinna rūpiṇi
namaḥ. Śakti pāda-amṛtam śirasi āvāhayāmi ||
(Invoke nectar from left foot (Śakti's foot) on the head)
|| tadrūpiṇi ēkarasyatvam kṛtvāhi ētat svarūpiṇi bhūtvā parāmṛtākārā mayī cit sphuraṇam kuru
namaḥ. Śivā Śakti sāmarasya amṛtam lalāṭe āvāhayāmi ||
(Invoke nectar from both Śivā and Śakti's feet on the head)
|| aim blūm jhmroum jum saḥ amṛte amṛtōdbhavē amṛtēśvari amṛta varśiṇi amṛtam srāvaya srāvaya
svāhā namaḥ. Karuṇa rasāmṛtam netrayoḥ āvāhayāmi ||
(Invoke nectar of boundless mercy from eyes of Śakti on the head)
|| Aim vada vada vāgvādini Aim. Sangeeta Sudhā amṛtam mukhe āvāhayāmi ||
(Invoke nectar of divine music from face of Śakti)
|| Klīm klinnē klēdini klēdaya klēdaya mahā kṣōbham kuru kuru Klīm
Śrī mātṛu kṣīra dārāḥ hṛdaye āvāhayāmi ||
(Invoke divinely milk from the breasts of Śakti to the heart)
|| Itah pūrvam (itah param) prāṇa buddhi dēha dharma ādhikārataḥ jāgrat svapna suṣupti avastāsu
manasā vācā karmaṇā hastābhyām padbhyām udarēna śiśnā yōnyā yat uktam yat kṛtam yat smṛtam
(yat smarami yat vacmi yat karomi) tat sarvam brahmārpaṇam bhavatu svāhā ||
END OF PART I
8.2 Part-II: Ṣoḍaśa upacāra
|| aim hrīm śrīm aim klīm sauḥ aim hrīm klīm cāmuṇḍāyai vicche
Iti pañca daśākṣara mantreṇa sakala upacārān kalpayet ||
(With this 15 lettered Mantra, all upacāras will have to be performed))
|| Śrī Sūkta, Durgā Sūkta, Puruṣa Sūkta, Rudrā Sūkta, nārāyaṇa sūktāni yathā
Śakti yathā avakāśam japan sarva-upacārān kuryāt ||
(Do all upacāras with Śrī Sūktam, Durgā Sūktam, Puruṣa Sūktam, Rudram and nārāyaṇa
Sūktam to our convenience)
|| aim hrīm śrīm aim klīm sauḥ aim hrīm klīm cāmuṇḍāyai vicche
pādyam kalpayāmi namaḥ – iti pādau prakṣālya ||
(Wash the feet)
|| aim hrīm śrīm aim klīm sauḥ aim hrīm klīm cāmuṇḍāyai vicche
ābharaṇa avaropaṇa kalpayāmi namaḥ ||
(Remove the jewels)
|| aim hrīm śrīm aim klīm sauḥ aim hrīm klīm cāmuṇḍāyai vicche
sugandhi taila abhyaṅganam sarvāṅge kalpayāmi namaḥ ||
(apply fragrant oils to all parts of body)
|| aim hrīm śrīm aim klīm sauḥ aim hrīm klīm cāmuṇḍāyai vicche
majjana śālā praveśanam kalpayāmi namaḥ ||
(enter the abhiṣeka room for bath)
|| aim hrīm śrīm aim klīm sauḥ aim hrīm klīm cāmuṇḍāyai vicche
upaveśanam kalpayāmi namaḥ ||
(Seat Devī)
|| aim hrīm śrīm aim klīm sauḥ aim hrīm klīm cāmuṇḍāyai vicche
uṣṇodaka snānaṃ kalpayāmi namaḥ ||
(Bathe her with warm water)
|| aim hrīm śrīm aim klīm sauḥ aim hrīm klīm cāmuṇḍāyai vicche
dakṣiṇā āvṛta śaṅkha gandhodakena prokṣaṇaṃ kalpayāmi namaḥ ||
(Pour scented water with a right-sided conch)
Prāṇa Pratiṣṭhā:
|| Ōm aim hrīm śrīm, ām hrīm krōm| yam ram lam vam, śam ṣam sam ham| ōm hamsaḥ sōham,
sōham hamsaḥ śivaḥ, śrī cakrasya śrī lalitāyāḥ mama prāṇaḥ, iha prāṇaḥ, mama jīvastiṣthatu,
mama sarvēndriyāni, vānmanaś cakṣuḥ śrōtra, jihvā ghrāṇā, vāk pāṇi, pāda pāyūpastha lingāni,
asmin śrī cakre, asyāḥ nijadēhe, sukham ciram tiṣthantu svāhā |
Ōm asunītē, punarasmāsu cakṣuḥ, punaḥ prāṇa-mihanō, dhēhi bhōgam | jyōk paṣyēma, sūrya-
muccaranta-manumatē-mṛḷayānaḥ svasti, amṛtam vai prāṇaḥ, amṛtam āpaha, prānānēva,
yathāsthānam, upahvayatē | prāṇa pratiṣṭhāpana, prōkṣaṇa, muhūrtaḥ sumuhūrto astu ||
|| aim hrīm śrīm aim klīm sauḥ aim hrīm klīm cāmuṇḍāyai vicche
– amṛta āsavam kalpayāmi namaḥ ||
(Offer nectar to Devī on a throne)
|| aim hrīm śrīm aim klīm sauḥ aim hrīm klīm cāmuṇḍāyai vicche
–maṅgala ārātrikam kalpayāmi namaḥ ||
|| aim hrīm śrīm aim klīm sauḥ aim hrīm klīm cāmuṇḍāyai vicche
– hāsam kalpayāmi namaḥ ||
(Enjoy Her gentle smile)
|| aim hrīm śrīm aim klīm sauḥ aim hrīm klīm cāmuṇḍāyai vicche
–chatra cāmara darpaṇa tāla vṛntāni kalpayāmi namaḥ ||
(Show her Umbrella, Cāmara and Mirror and play all kinds of divine Music for her)
(Show Daśa Mudrās)
1. Drām
2. Drīm
3. Klīm
4. Blūm
5. Saḥ
6. Krōm
7. Hskphrēm
8. Hsaum Sahauḥ
9. Aim
10. Hsraim, hsrklīm hsrsauḥ
|| Iti Śivam ||
END OF PART II
8.3 Part-III: Khaḍga Māla
Continue to keep the Śrī Cakra on the lap of kumārī, Suvāsinī or Dampatī and do Khaḍga Māla Stotra
with flowers or kuṅkumam.
The Khaḍga Māla Stotram is the Devī's praise which lists the powers of Devī. It can be recited in five different ways. Śuddha Śakti
Māla means you are not adding any ending, you are just being the power yourself (not seeing any difference); Namo antaḥ Māla,
you are adding namaḥ at the end (seeing a difference, but knowing that you are not different from the power); Jaya antaḥ Māla
means you are saying Jaya (victory to) at the end; Svāhā antaḥ Māla means you are saying Svāhā and offering ghee into the fire;
and Tarpanantha Māla means you say tarpayāmi and offering water of your life in the cause of the power. You can think of Devī as
a male, as a female, or you can think of Devī as a loving couple in union. These three ways of thinking can be combined with the
above five ways of endings to make 5x3 =15 ways of worship. Such ways of worship are indeed an integral part of worship of Devī.
They are the meanings of letters in the Pañcadaśī Mantra.
Guru Maṇḍala
Mitrēśamayi, Ṣaṣthīśamayi, Uḍḍīśamayi, Caryānāthamayi, Lōpāmudrāmayi, Agastyamayi,
Kālatāpanamayi, Dharmācāryamayi, Muktakēśīśvaramayi, Dīpakalānāthamayi, Viṣṇudevamayi,
Prabhākaradevamayi, Tējōdevamayi, Manōjadevamayi, Kalyāṇadēvamayi, Vāsudevamayi,
Ratnadevamayi, Śrī Rāmānandamayi
1st Enclosure
Aṇimā Siddhē, Laghimā Siddhē, Garimā Siddhē, Mahimā Siddhē, Īśitva Siddhē, Vaśitva Siddhē,
Prākāmya Siddhē, Bhukti Siddhē, Icchā Siddhē, Prāpti Siddhē, Sarvakāma Siddhē
Brāhmi, Māhēśvarī, Kaumārī, Vaiṣṇavī, Vārāhī, Māhēndrī, Cāmuṇda, Mahālakṣmī
Sarva Samkṣōbhiṇī, Sarva Vidrāviṇī, Sarvākarṣiṇī, Sarva Vaśamkarī, Sarvōnmādinī, Sarva
Mahāṅkuśē, Sarva Kēcari, Sarva Bījē, Sarva Yōnē, Sarva Trikhaṇḍē, Trilōkya mōhana cakra
svāmini, Prakaṭa yōginī
2nd Enclosure
Kāmākarṣiṇī, Buddhyākarṣiṇī, Ahamkārākarṣiṇī, Śabdākarṣiṇī, Sparśākarṣiṇī, Rūpākarṣiṇī,
Rasākarṣiṇī, Gandhākarṣiṇī, Cittākarṣiṇī, Dhairyākarṣiṇī, Smṛtyākarṣiṇī, Nāmākarṣiṇī,
Bījākarṣiṇī, Ātmākarṣiṇī, Amṛtākarṣiṇī, Śarīrākarṣiṇī, Sarvāśā paripūraka cakra svamini, Gupta
yōginī
3rd Enclosure
Anaṅga Kusumē, Anaṅga Mēkhalē, Anaṅga Madanē, Anaṅga Madanānturē, Anaṅga Rēkhē,
Anaṅga Vēginī, Anaṅgāṅkuśē, Anaṅga Mālini, Sarva Samkṣōbhaṇa cakra svāmini, Guptatara
yōginī
4th Enclosure
Sarva Samkṣōbhiṇī, Sarva Vidrāvinī, Sarvā-Karṣiṇī, Sarvā-Hlādinī, Sarva Sammōhinī, Sarva
Stambhinī, Sarva Jṛmbhinī, Sarva Vaśamkarī, Sarva Rañjinī, Sarvōnmādinī, Sarvārthasādhinī,
Sarva Sampattipūraṇī, Sarva Mantramayī, Sarva Dvandva Kṣayamkarī, Sarva Saubhāgyadāyaka
Cakra Svāmini, Sampradāya yōginī
5th Enclosure
Sarva Siddhipradē, Sarva Sampatpradē, Sarva Priyamkarī, Sarva Maṅgalakāriṇī, Sarva Kāmapradē,
Sarvaduḥkha Vimōcinī, Sarva Mṛtyu Praśamanī, Sarva Vighna Nivāriṇī, Sarvāṅga Sundarī, Sarva
Saubhāgyadāyinī, Sarvārtha Sādhaka Cakra Svāmini, Kulōttīrṇa yōginī
6th Enclosure
Sarva Jñē, Sarva Śaktē, Sarvaiśvarya pradāyini, Sarva Jñānamayi, Sarva Vyādhivināśini,
Sarvādhārasvarūpē, Sarva Pāpaharē, Sarvānandamayī, Sarva Rakśa Svarūpiṇi, Sarvēpśita
Phalapradē, Sarva Rakṣākara Cakra Svamini, Nigarbha yōginī
7th Enclosure
Vaśinī, Kāmēśvarī, Mōdinī, Vimalē, Aruṇē, Jayinī, Sarvēśvarī, Kaulinī, Sarvarōgahara Cakra
Svāmini, Rahasya yōginī
8th Enclosure
Bānini, Cāpini, Pāsini, Aṅkuśini
Mahā Kāmēśvarī, Mahā Vajrēśvarī, Mahā Bhagamālinī, Sarva Siddhiprada Cakra Svāmini, Ati
Rahasya yōginī
9th Enclosure
Śrī Śrī Mahā Bhattārikē Sarvānanda Maya Cakra Svāmini, Parāpara Rahasya Yōginī
Śrī Sūktam is an ancient Vedic hymn, lost in hoary antiquity (and so called khila). Śrī reflects the glory,
beauty and abundance of God. Wealth does not just mean money. It is conceived as energies stored in fire,
wind, sun, earth, pleasure, intelligence, and waters. All these are renewable. Hence Śrī (Lakṣmī) is
forever considered to be fresh and vivacious, bubbling with creativity and infectious laughter (Hasantī)
like a young girl or woman. Who does not desire such a refreshing and rejuvenating companion?
Upacāra means an intimate service. Intimacy is the first step to identity. It may contain an abhyaṅga
snānaṃ meaning deep massage followed by bath, applying different perfumes to different parts of body of
recipient, offering clothes, ornaments, flowers, delicacies to eat etc., Khaḍga Māla is a famous stotra
containing the names of all deities attending on supreme power Śrī Lalitā. They are in nine layers of
enclosures surrounding the seat of all powers. It also mentions the names of gurus. The names of these
deities are interpreted as female (śakti), male (śiva) and their union (śivaśakti). The secret of Khaḍga
Māla is: on waxing or waning part of in a lunar month, for five days Śakti is worshipped as female, for
five days as male Śiva, and for five days as Śivaśakti united as in a śivaliṅgam. Such power packed
procedures of worship are held most secret since they yield all siddhis. Pūjā with Khaḍga Māla is said to
be equivalent to complete Navāvaraṇa Pūjā.
Remember that the experience in sahasrāra is similar to that of Śivaśakti in svadhiṣṭhāna cakra. Don’t
be surprised.
For busy people these days, time is simply not available for long rituals. At the most they get 30 mins.
Many people have been asking me to give them an ultra short daily regime which does not miss out on any
benefit, yet doable. It may not be the best, but it should be good; correctly arguing that good is not an
enemy of the best.
I suggest the following to them.
10 minutes: Prāṇāyām.
Soham with focus on ingoing breath striking the ājñā cakra is the best.
Stay for some time in sahasràrà cakra and come down step by step to
mūlādhāra cakra.
*Life comes from sun. Mind (memory) comes from moon. Hence, Sun is represented here as the life
energy.
1. Triveṇī Kalpam, or
2. 16 services pūjā to a Devī (living Śakti or a symbol)
3. Khaḍga Māla pūjā.
4. Draw the Śrī Cakra.
ācamanaṁ
Offer water to sip four times to Śakti
Aim ātmatatvāya svāhā |
Klīm vidyā tatvāya svāhā |
Sauḥ Śiva tatvāya svāhā |
Aim Klīm Sauḥ sarva tatvēbhyaḥ svāhā ||
Invocation
Hold a flower at the heart (or throat) of Śakti and say
caturbhujē candra kalāvatamsē kucōnnatē kumkuma rāga śoṇē
puṇḍrēkṣu pāśāṅkuśa puṣpabāṇa hastē namasē jagadēka mātaḥ
(O Devī, of 4 hands, wearing as crown jewel a digit of the moon, high
breasted, red as kuṅkumam, wearing in your hands a sugarcane bow,
noose, goad and five flower arrows, I blow to thee, the one and only mother of all that I see).
āvāhanam: (Invitation)
Ōm Śrīm hiraṇya varṇāṁ hariṇīṁ suvarṇa rajata srajām |
candrāṁ hiraṇmayīṁ lakṣmīṁ jātavēdō mamāvaha ||
Aim hrīm śrīm hrīm śrīm sauḥ Śrī Lalitāyāḥ Amṛta Caitanya mūrtim kalpayāmi namaḥ
Ōm ām hrīm krōm mama prāṇaḥ iha prāṇaḥ |
jīva iha sthitaḥ sarvēndriyāni iha sthitāḥ ||
Śrī Lalitā dēvīm dhyāyāmi āvāhayāmi namaḥ ||
She keeps the flower near her heart or in her hair.
āsanam: (Place flowers and akṣatās under her seat) Hrīm tāṁ ma āvaha jātavēdō
lakṣmīm anapagāminīm |
yasyāṁ hiraṇyaṁ vindēyaṁ gāmaśvaṁ puruṣānaham ||
suvāsinyai āsanam kalpayāmi namaḥ ||
pādyam: (Wash the feet of Śakti, applying turmeric powder and red lacquer) Klīm aśva
pūrvāṁ ratha madhyāṁ hastināda prabōdhinīm |
śriyaṁ dēvīm upahvayē śrīr mā dēvīr juṣatām ||
suvāsinyai pādayōḥ pādyam kalpayāmi namaḥ ||
arghyam: (Wash her hands and give viśēṣārghyām) Aim kāṁsōsmitāṁ hiraṇya
prākārāmārdrāṁ jvalantīṁ tṛptāṁ tarpayantīm |
padmē sthitāṁ padma varṇāṁ tāmihōpahvayē śriyam ||
suvāsinyai hastayōḥ arghyam samarpayāmi namaḥ ||
pañcāmṛtasnānaṃ: (Offering paṇcamṛtam - five nectars) Wash her feet and sprinkle
water on other parts, if time does not permit Ōm ādityavarṇē
tapasōadhijātō vanaspatis tava vṛkṣottha bilvaḥ |
tasya phalāni tapasā nudantu māyāntarāyāśca bāhyā alakṣmīḥ ||
suvāsinyai pañcāmṛtasnānaṃ kalpayāmi namaḥ ||
Here you may recite pañcāmṛta abhiṣeka mantras (given previously). If she permits you, some ladies can
actually give her a full hair bath. Also while bathing, Durgā – Puruṣa – Rudra – Śrī Sūkta mantras, Gangā
stotram, etc. may be recited.
With Water
Ōm āpōhiṣthā mayōbhuvastāna ūrje dadhātana | mahēraṇāya cakṣasē ||
yōvaśśivatamōrasaḥ tasya bhājayatē hanaḥ| uśatīriva mātaraḥ||
tasmā araṅgamāmavō yasyakṣayāya jinvatha | āpo janayathācanaḥ || śuddhōdaka snānaṃ kalpayāmi
namaḥ ||
With Milk (used for the mūlādhārā cakra) Ōm āpyāyasva samētutē viśvataḥ sōma vṛṣṇiyam |
bhavā vājasya saṅgathē || kṣīrēṇa snāpayāmi |
With Curds (used for the svādhiśthāna cakra) Ōm dadhikrāvarṇṇō akāriṣam jiṣṇōraśvasya vājinaḥ |
surabhinō mukhā karat praṇa āyugmṣi tāriṣat || dadhnā snāpayāmi |
With Ghee (used for the maṇipūra cakra) Ōm śukramasi jyōtirasi tējōsi devōvassavitōtpunāt
vacchidrēṇa pavitrēṇa vasōḥ
sūryasya raśmibhiḥ || ājyēna snāpayāmi |
With Honey (used for the anāhatā cakra) Ōm madhu vātā ṛtāyate madhu kṣaranti sindhavaḥ |
mādhvīr nassantvōṣadhīḥ ||
madhu naktam utō ṣasi
madhu matpārdhivagm rajaḥ |
madhu dyaurastunaḥ pitā ||
madhu mānnō vanaspatir
madhumāgm astu sūryaḥ |
mādhvīr gāvōbhavantunaḥ ||
madhu madhu madhu | madhunā snāpayāmi ||
With Fruit Juice (used for the viśuddhi cakra) Ōm yāḥ phalinīr yāḥ aphalāḥ apuṣpāyāsca puṣpiṇīḥ |
bṛhaspatiḥ prasutās tānō muñcastvagm hasaḥ || phalōdakēna snāpayāmi
Viṣṇu - with milk (used to worship at the heart center; nipples of the Devī) Ōm sahasra śīrṣā puruṣaḥ
sahasrākṣaḥ sahasrapāt
sabhūmim viśvatō vrtvā atyatiṣṭhad daśāngulam
Durgā - with milk and kuṅkumam (worship the Svādhiṣṭhāna cakra) tām agni varṇām tapasā
jvalantīm vairōcanīm karmaphalēṣu juṣṭām
durgām devīgm śaraṇamaham prapadyē sutarasi tarasē namaḥ
Śivā - with coconut water preferably or any fruit juice or perfumed water (chanted for the worship of
the Śivā Liṅga, the clitoris or the phallus) Ōm tryambakam yajāmahē sugandhim puṣṭivardhanam
urvārukamiva bandhanān mṛtyōr mukṣīya māmṛtāt
Ōm mṛtyavē svāhā mṛtyavē svāḧā
Ōm namō bhagavatē rudrāya viṣṇavē mṛtyurmē pāhī
prāṇānām granthirasi rudrō māviśāntakaḥ
tēnān nēnāpyāyasva
mama mṛtyur naśyat vāyur vardhatām
Ōm śāntiḥ śāntiḥ śāntiḥ
adhāṅga pūja
Do pūjā with tulasī leaves, bilva leaves, lotuses or fragrant flowers or perfumed flowers / petals at the
places indicated below: || Ōm aim hrīm śrīm cañcalāyai namaḥ śrīm pādau pūjayāmi ||
(Offer flowers to feet)
tāṁbūlam:(offer tāṁbūlam - beetle leaves, nut and fruit) Klīm ārdrāṁ yaḥ kariṇīṁ
yaṣṭiṁ suvarṇāṁ hēmamālinīm |
sūryāṁ hiraṇmayīṁ lakṣmīṁ jātavēdō mamāvaha ||
suvāsinyai tāṁbūlaṁ samarpayāmi ||
Dhanam: is the unlimited energy / wealth from the respective elements: agnir: thermal
vāyur: wind
sūryō: solar
vasuḥ: land, real estate indrō: enjoying beauty bṛhaspati: inspired intelligence varuṇa: oceans
Stand in front and do namaskāram lying flat on the ground. She blesses you by putting the akṣatas (rice) on
your head and flowers in hand.
urasāśirasā dṛṣtyā manasā vacasā tathā
padbhyām karābhyām karṇābhyam praṇamoṣṭhāṅga ucyatē
ātma pradakṣina namaskārān samarpayāmi
Request to be pardoned from any errors that might have been committed during the puja and recite:
aparādha sahasrāṇi kriyantē harniśam mayā |
dāsohamiti mām matvā kṣamasva lalitāmbikē||
She blesses you by taking them into her right hand and placing them on your head and hers too and says:
tavābhīṣṭam dadāmyaham jagatām upakārakam
The devotee should then ask her for any boon they wish – including welfare of the whole world. If she is
giving you her boon, she places bottom side of her left foot’s toe on top of your head; or puts her right
hand on top of your head; or implants a kiss on top of your head or on the third eye; or hugs you, or asks
you to do something. Do it. These are the various ways of passing on a blessing. You will know if you
have received a blessing if a thrill passess through your body.
*Similar to the process in Lalitā Kramam, we invoke the cosmos that is already in our hearts into whatever it is we worship, for the sake of
worship, and at the end of the worship we take it back in to ourselves (this is to emphasize that you are only worshipping the purified part of
you).
This is the Mahatī Vidyā, Śrī Cakra Samrājñī, Simhāsaṇēśvarī, Ādi Para Śakti.
Ōm hrīm śrīm
Auspicious days for Devī worship:
Weekdays:
Friday, Tuesday
Lunar days:
Bright half 14th, paurṇamī.
Dark half 8th, 14th, amāvāsyā
Transitions:
karkaṭaka, makara saṅkrānti
9 nights:
caitra, aswija
The preliminaries such as āsana puja, ācamanam etc. are not included in this book because it is not part
of the original Paraśurāma Kalpa Sūtrās. However, the devotee may include it if he/she wishes to do so
OR they could simulate these preliminaries by simply doing prokṣaṇaṃ instead.
10.2 A note to the reader about the use of “aḥ, aḥm vs. aṃ aḥ”
The preference in this book is “aḥ, aḥm” because adding the sound “m” to “aṃ” makes it “aḥ”; to “aḥ”
makes it “aḥm”.
Every bīja ends with an “m” which connects with Mother to get its power. The last two vowels (śakti
bījas) are “aṃ” and “aḥ”.
When we add “m” (which is another bindu) to “aṃ” it becomes “aḥ”;
Similarly “aḥ” becomes “aḥm” (pronounced aham).
Thus the last two vowel bījas get differentiated from the first two.
Aham is a great mantra called kāma-kalā. This has many shades of meanings.
A is negation, stands for zero.
Ha is visarga, two zeros.
M ends everything into silence, it is also a zero.
Aham can be read vertical down as a circle for face, two circles for breasts and one more for a zero,
the source (womb) of all zeros. This is called kāma-kalā.
Elaborated by Ādi Śaṅkarā in his śloka:
mukhaṃ binduṃ kṛtvā kuca-yugam adhas tasya tad-adho
harārdhaṃ dhyāyed yo hara-mahiṣi te manmatha-kalām |
It means: Make a circle for face, two circles below for breasts, an oval for womb and meditate on this
kāma-kalā. It is the pañcadaśī (manmatha is the ṛṣi)
Kāma-kalā is brahmavidyā. Top (circle) zero is an illusion. Creation of a triads whose sum is zero like
for example: 1,0, -1; pi,0, -pi; x,o,-x; t,0,-t: good, 0, bad; all triads are illusions. The whole drama of the
world is an illusion. The only truth is śūnya, the zero, which contains all of cosmos, which is itself śūnya.
Thus Buddhists call this shunya, Hindus call it pūrṇa.
Meditation on kāma-kalā leads to this realization. Me, world, śivā, śakti are all illusions. This is the
greatest vidyā. I don’t exist. So I cannot be created, nor destroyed. Time, space, matter, knowledge, action
don’t exist. This has been called Mokṣa. The final release.
10.3 Śrī Cakra Pūjā – time slots
The worship of Devī in Śrī Cakra is regarded as the highest form of the Devī worship. Originally Lord
Śivā gave 64 Cakras and their Mantras to the world, to attain various spiritual and material benefits. For
his consort Devī he gave the Śrī Cakra and the highly coveted and the most powerful ṣoḍaśākṣari mantra,
which is the equivalent of all the other 64 put together.
Śivā along with Śakti is engaged in the eternal dissolution and recreation of the universe. The Bindu in the
center of the Śrī Cakra is the symbolic representation of the cosmic spiritual union of Śivā and Śakti.
Apart from that the Śrī Cakra also embodies countless number of deities and represents the whole of
creation. Hence by worshipping the Devī in Śrī Cakra one is actually worshipping the highest ultimate
force in the Tantrik form.
Meru is a 3D object while Śrī Cakra is a 2D rendering of the Meru!
Meru Cakra
The Meru is the three dimensions of the Śrī Cakra. If we returned to the two dimension Śrī Cakra, and
imagine that the bindu in its center is the peak of a mountain. Then imagine that the mountain is built up in
tiers, each tier being one of the circles of triangles or lotus petals, with the outermost square representing
ground level. Now, imagine a vertical spine down the center of the mountain, then at each point that the
spine and a tier intersect, there is a cakra. The peak represents Mount Meru, abode of the Gods.
The Basics of Śrī Yantra:
Before starting the worship it is advisable to know about the way the Śrī Yantra is constructed, what all it
represents, about the 9 āvaraṇas, the deities, their guṇas and significance, so that your worship is more
meaningful. The following are the authentic details as given in various Tantra and Mantra scriptures.
Five downward pointing triangles representing Devī intersect with four upward pointing triangles
representing Śivā, forming 43 triangles including the central triangle.
From the five Śakti triangles comes creation and from the four Śivā triangles comes the
dissolution.
The union of five Śaktis and four Fires causes the cakra of creation to evolve.
At the centre of the bindu of the Śrī Yantra is Kāma-kalā, which has three bindus.
One is red, one is white and one is mixed.
The red bindu is Kurukullā the Female form,
the white bindu is Vārāhī the Male form, and
the mixed bindu is the union of Śivā and Śakti – the individual as the potential Śrī Cakra. Vārāhī,
the father-form, gives four dhātus to the child and Kurukullā, the mother-form, gives five dhātus to
the child. These represent the nine dhatus of the human body.
Vārāhī’s four fires are the 12 (4 x 3) sun kalās, the 12 Zodiac constellations.
Kurukullā’s five triangles are the 15 (5 x 3) kalās of the moon, 15 lunar Tithis.
These nine triangles also represent the nine stages of growth of the human child in the womb.
Surrounding the 43 triangles formed by the intersection of the nine triangles is the 16 petals circle.
Surrounding the 16 petal circle is an 8 petal circle.
After that the 3 lines and at the outermost part of the Śrī Yantra there are 3 lines called the
Bhūpura.
The 43 triangles constitute the six inner sections called āvaraṇas, the two circles of petals are two
more āvaraṇas and the Bhūpura of 3 lines is the last āvaraṇa.
These 9 āvaraṇas of the Śrī Yantra have various presiding Devīs. They are the Devī’s parivār (retinue)
of total 108. In the Śrī Cakra Pūjā they are systematically worshipped one by one with their names and
mantras. The presiding Deity of Śrī Cakra, Devī, is Known as Lalita Tripurasundarī. The form of Devī
Kāmākṣī of Kanchipuram is the closest resemblance of the Devī as described in the scriptures.
The Meru Cakra or Śrī Cakra is a three-dimensional Śrī Yantra, the embodiment of Śrī Lakṣmī
(abundance) and Tripurasundarī (beauty). It is the yantra of Śrī Vidya, sacred knowledge of the Goddess.
It can also be seen as the unification of Masculine Divine and Feminine Divine:
Śivā and Śakti,
Lakṣmī and Nārāyaṇa,
Puruṣa and Prakṛti.
It can be effectively used for correcting defects of the north (direction of health, fortune, career, and
money) and northeast (energetically the most sacred and important area of any building). When placed in
the northeast, it improves the spatial energies of the whole house. Defects in the northeast and north are
the most serious, so the Meru Cakra is a valuable corrective tool of Vedic yantra technology. Even if your
home or office has been built according to Vastu, the Gold Meru Cakra is a great energetic blessing that
enhances the flow of vibrant energy of health and abundance.
10.5 Three Śaktis
Pūjā is done to Kriyā Śakti, Jñāna Śakti and Icchā Śakti. What is the meaning and importance of these
Śaktis in the Mother worship? They are the powers residing in the erotic zones of a woman. All
Goddesses are powers of attention, awarenesses, residing in certain places or times. Pure unbounded
awareness is considered to be the universal Mother, Lalitā. All Śaktis are Her body parts. Her body is
space and time.
Gaurī = Kriyā
Lakṣmī = Jñāna
Sarasvatī = Icchā
Each letter of the Sanskrit alphabet has a very precise meaning. Each letter has cosmic, individual and
microcosmic meanings. If you look at the Vedic language, you will see that the sentences rarely, if at all,
repeat themselves. It is an irreducible representation. You cannot condense it any further. Vēdas are highly
coded forms of information, like, for example, the RNA and DNA codes of genes. They code the
information of life so tightly that you cannot reduce them any further. The Vedic language is condensed
into these alphabets which are irreducible representations of the original meanings connected with the
sounds from the drumbeats of Śivā.
10.7 An alternate visualisation of Virajā Homaṃ
Establishing presence of Devī inside and outside. Repeat what I say in your mind: I have to die
someday. Imagine I am dead here and now. I am seeing my body dried up and dead, kept on the floor. All
my friends and relatives have come, paid their last homeage by doing a pradakṣhina to the corpse and
offered some water on the body. The body is covered in a white cloth, tied to a frame. It is being taken to
the śmaśān. Someone is carrying an earthern pot of water ahead. Some of friends are following in a
procession to the chants of nārāyaṇa, nārāyaṇa. There is a funeral pyre kept ready for receiving the body.
It is placed on it. The frame is untied. White cloth is removed. Naked we come into this world through a
yonī; naked we go out of it through another yonī, the fire. The pot of water being carried on the head of a
person is pierced to make a hole. He goes around, drawing a line of water round the pyre. He makes three
rounds. At eachround, one more hole is pierced into the pot. He throws the pot on the ground, breaking it.
The water life and earth of body.
Turmeric, sandalwood powder, kuṅkumam are placed on the chest. Camphor is placed on top of it. Some
sandal sticks, then some mango sticks are placed like a triangle on top of the chest, then somemore bigger
sticks. Some camphor is lighted outside, then mixed with the camphor on the chest. First we smell the
burning camphor, then sandal, then mango sticks, then other smells. I see the smoke, little lights, sparks,
then more lights, and now the whole pyre is ablaze. I am watching all this, so I could not have died, could
I? My soul has left the body like old worn out clothes; that is all.
It is afternoon. The whole afternoon the pyre was burning. Finally the fire has spent itself. All that
remained of my former body is a handful of holy ashes, fit for being on the forehead of Śivā. It is now
evening. From somewhere dark clouds gathered in the sky foreboding rain. Suddenly there is a pleasant
change in temperature; the dry parched earth is anticipating rain. Suddenly lightning strikes, then thunder.
The clouds have been seeded and the first drops of rain fall on the earth. The earth thrills emitting a
wonderful perfume. More lightnings, thunder and rain of nectar is pouring down incessantly the whole
evening and night on the ashes.
It is early morning. A red Sun is rising on the east, turning orange and golden yellow, increasing in
brightness to a white glow. May be, because of the rain, the Sun is very cool. It is coming up over the
head. It is descending! About 9 inches above my head, I experience a cool shower of sparks of white
light. Where is my body? Oh, it is hollow inside, like a balloon. The light is descending into my body. It
has settled down into the lotus in my heart like an iridescent ball of light emitting millions of cool white
rays. My whole body is filled with its light from head to toes, glowing bright. I am peaceful, joyful, rich,
harmonious, and divine. All I need to do is to look with compassion on this miserable world to heal all its
wounds. The iridescent ball of light in my heart has divided into a male and a female form in a close
embrace enjoying the unending bliss of Śivā and Śakti in coitus. Nectar is flowing from my feet, healing
this earth.
10.8 The Meanings of the Channels which are called Mantras in the Navāvaraṇa Pūjā
With the grace of the Divine Mother, I hope to be able to give some meanings to the channels which are
called the mantras. Really Mantras cannot be assigned any meanings because they are channels of
communication. What meaning can you give to channel no. 4 of TV or the frequency 101.7 MHz?
Whatever information comes through them is the meaning, if you like to put it that way. What you can
probably define is the nature of the information that comes through. For example, you know that if you
switch on the MTV you are likely to get music and dance; on Discovery channel, you likely to develop
environmental concerns, and things like that. We can make broad categorizations but not specifics.
Ōm
There are 2 great mantras, one of which is called Ōm and the other is also Ōm. Ōm is the combination of
AUM. If you reverse the sequence a little and put the A at the end, it becomes "UMA". If you think of
AUM as Śivā, UMA is Śakti. These are the two Ōms. Are they different? Yes and no. It is just the way you
look at it. The symbolism of Godhead is carried not only into the sound symbols but also into the visual
symbols. In the visual symbols, the triangle with its apex down is called a yonī, the Śakti from which the
child comes. You take the same triangle and turn it upwards it is Śivā. You can think of it another way.
Suppose you scan the triangle with a horizontal line from bottom up. In a Śivā triangle (apex up) what you
see is the width of the intersected line is gradually diminishing and becoming zero. In a Śakti triangle
what is seen is that it is starting at a point and growing into a line. So the growth of the awareness process
is the Śakti but both are the same, there is no real distinction between the two. Some are called Śivā
triangles and some Śakti triangles.
A word about namaḥ. If you look at the Śivā sūtram, Na is śabda, Ma is touch. Na means no. No touch.
What could it mean, no touch? Are you not touching left and right hands with namaḥ? Aha, that is the
meaning, the toucher and the touched are the same.
When do you have a touch? When there is a difference. Can a finger touch itself? A finger can touch
anything else, but it cannot touch itself, yet it can be aware of itself. So when you are the object of
your vision, the touch disappears, but awareness does not. The touch is there as long as the interval is
there.
When you say namaḥ there is no touch, no contact. It means that what I am meditating on has become
myself. So I have become the ocean of nectar. Also; you say namaḥ by joining your left hand and right
hand. If you know that your left hand belongs to the female part of you and the right hand to the male
part (Ardhanārīśvara), you join the male and the female in Namaḥ. Left is vāma what you see (vāma =
what you vomitted, what came out of you). The right is what you are. Joining of what you see with what
you are is the meaning implied by joining the left and right hands. When you say namaḥ you are
gesturing in effect that "I am seeing you as a separate being, but I know you and me are one".
You are imposing the qualities of the object on which you are meditating upon onto yourself by the
gesture of Namaḥ. That is called meditation. In meditation, you don't stop seeing; you don't stop
knowing; but you are becoming what you see, what you know. This state of being in which you are
merged with, in yoga with the object of perception, is called Samādhi. The word Samādhi is composed
of two terms: sāma = Equal, adhi = Regarding. In this first meditation of Śrī Cakra, you are thinking
of it as an ocean of nectar first as an object; then you are becoming the ocean of nectar.
Let me tell you about a nice custom. Hindus make the child write Ōm namaḥ śivāya siddham namaḥ
at the time of starting to learn letters. What does this mean? Ōm is the name of God. Namaḥ I am not
seeing anything different from me. This knowledge that I am what I am seeing is Śivāya for the good of
everyone. And how you attain this state? Siddham Namaḥ you go to a person who is a Siddha, one
who is enlightened and gesture Namaḥ "You are me". Thus you are invoking the Siddha into yourself.
Then the siddha's knowledge becomes yours and therefore you can become enlightened.
The transfer of power or grace occurs through identification, which happens through paying attention.
Namaḥ is constantly being used as an ending here with every mantra. There are five endings which can
be used normally to any pūjā. These are jaya, namaḥ, svāhā, tarpaṇa and śuddha.
10.14 Agni Kalās
We invoke the ten kalās of the fire. The kalās are all aspects of Devī. The first three are in the
svādhiśthāna cakra. Yam dhūmrārciṣē namaḥ(smoke), ram ūṣmāyai namaḥ (heat), lam jvalinyai
namaḥ (glow). The Sanskrit letters listed in the beginning are pointers to the places where you put
your imagination in yourself, in Devī's body and in the Yantrā. The Yantrā we are talking about is the
viśēṣārghyā yantrā. These Bījakṣaras are located in the Svādhiṣṭhāna cakra: bam, bham, mam, yam,
ram, lam. These are not the mantras, they are the aspects of the fire and you are trying to see where
they are coming from. The Agni kalās reside as the digestive fire in the stomach and also as the lust in
the human being just as the light resides in the fire. Agni also exists as time.
Yam dhūmrārciṣē namaḥ. You are looking at the left top portion of the yonī. If you superimpose the
yonī on the bījas, you will see that yam is the left side of the clitoris, ram is the middle of the labia
and lam is the bottom of the labia. This invokes the lust, the Kāma. You are not invoking the right side
here. In other versions of tantrā, as you walk into the yajña śālā, the door is there. On the left-hand
side you worship bhairava - bhairavāya namaḥ. You worship lambodarāya namaḥ on top and on right
hand side you worship bhadrakālyai namaḥ. So saying you enter the śālā. The door is like the gate
through which you are born and through which you enter the yonī.
The next four Agni kalā bījas are taken from the Mūlādhārā cakra, vam jvālinyai namaḥ (flame), śam
visphuliṅginyai namaḥ (sparks issuing), ṣam suśriyai namaḥ (blessing), sam surūpāyai namaḥ
(beautiful).
The last three bījas come from the ājñā cakra, ham kapilāyai namaḥ (yellow) right eye; lam havya
vāhāyai namaḥ (consuming ghee) third eye; kṣam kavya vāhāyai namaḥ (consuming food offerings)
left eye.
So from the mūlādhārā and svādhiṣṭhāna, the fire which starts as lust goes up to the ājñā. At this point
it manifests as flowing time, past, present and future. The past is the right eye, the present is the 3rd
eye and the future is the left eye. The right eye is the eye of Śivā, he is called bhutanātha the lord of the
past. The left eye is the eye of the Devī. Devī is the creatrix, the mother, she brings the future into the
present.
The mantra for the Agni Kalās is: aim agni maṇḍalāya dharmaprada daśa kalātmanē śrī
mahātripurasundaryāḥ viśēṣārghyā pātra ādhāraya namaḥ. Aim hrīm śrīm agnim dūtam vṛṇīmahe
hōtāram viśvavēdasam asya yajñasya sukratum rām rīm rūm raim raum raḥ ramala varayūm agni
maṇḍalāya namaḥ.
Aim is Sṛṣṭi, creation. The real Sṛṣṭi starts with an idea in the brain. Creation actually starts with
Sarasvatī in the Sahasrāra cakra and moves down and takes the kriyā aspect (action). So aim agni
maṇḍalāya. Dharmaprada - dharma is considered to be your duty. What is your duty? It is defined in
the Upaniṣads as follows: "ācāryāya priyam dhanamāhrtya prajātantum mā vyavacchetsīḥ..." you
worship your teacher and see to it that this rare life which is a gift in this world is preserved. Do not
cut the thread of life. So procreate. That is the injunction of the vēdas. You owe a debt of life to your
parents. You repay that debt by giving life through your actions. Procreation is your dharma.
Nandi, the bull, who is the carrier of Śivā, is supposed to be the personification of dharma. One would
touch the testes of Nandi to energize the lingam before looking at Śivā. It is only the energized liṅgam
which has the desire to procreate which is to be Śivā. Otherwise it is śava (corpse). If you take away
the letter ‘i’ Śivā become śava.
What is the purpose of lust? It is to do your duty to your parents by procreating. There is a duty to your
parents and a duty to yourself. What is the duty to yourself? It is to deliver yourself from the shackles
of bondage. This same Agni which is instrumental for creating your children, is also instrumental for
creating your spiritual uplift. In the four goals of life (dharma, arthā, kāma, mokṣa) stated in the
Hindu philosophy, there is a connection between dharma and arthā (duty and wealth). You must
acquire your wealth without hurting or cheating others. And kāma and mokṣa are also combined.
Kāma must be transformed into Love, and Love must be transformed into liberation. Both bhoga and
yoga are included in the gamut of one's life.
Agni also exists in the fire which cooks your food. The Gita says,
aham vaiśvānaro bhūtvā prāṇināṃ deham āśritaḥ |
prāṇāpāna-samāyuktaḥ pacāmyannaṃ caturvidham ||
I exist as the fire and I cook the food in your stomach with the help of the prana and apana, the
ingoing and outgoing breaths.
Daśa kalātmanē - daśa means ten, kalā is an aspect of time. An aspect of anything is called kalā. So
the ten aspects of the fire; Śrī Mahātripurasundaryaḥ of the Mother Mahātripurasundarī;
viśēṣārghyā pātra ādhāraya namaḥ - viśēṣārghyā means not ordinary. It is the milk mixture to be
offered; pātra is the vessel; ādhāra is the base; the base of the vessel in which we are going to put the
special liquid which is immortal nectar, that base is Agni. In the Mūlādhārā cakra is where the base is
located and that is the fire. We human beings are driven by lust and its modifications. That is where we
are.
10.15 Sūrya Kalāvāhana - the Sun
āsatyēna - from beginning to end with truth; rajasā the emission of this truth; vartamānō - involved in
the emission of the truth from beginning to end; nivēśayan amṛtam martyamca - placing yourself in
immortality as well as mortality, into the yoga and the bhoga both; hiraṇyayēna - golden; savitā the
life giver. Sāvitrī is the goddess of the Gāyatri mantra; rathēnā - chariot. Riding on a golden chariot;
dēvōyāti - the sun moves in the sky; bhuvanā vipaśyan - looking at all the worlds.
hrām hrīm hrūm hraim hraum hraḥ - hrīm is the creative, explosive force which takes the point to
the triangle; these bījas are the modifications of hrīm from the coolness of am to the passion of ah. So
from the center you are moving towards the right and towards the left. Hrmalavarayūm - the pathway
in your body where these letters are located.
The location of the letters shows how tightly fixed the concept of the letters are in Sanskrit. Lord Yama
is the God of Death. Ya is located on the left-hand side of the svādhiṣṭhāna cakra. Ma is located on the
right-hand side. When you say Yama you are moving from the female to the male. That represents
moving your consciousness which is like death. Now if these letters are reversed you have māyā. You
are moving from Śivā to Śakti. Māyā is illusion but it also means pleasure, the flow of experience. So
when you move from Śivā to Śakti you are experiencing your being limited in your awareness by the
material world. And when you are moving from Śakti to Śivā you are expanding your awareness, you
are unlimited. The flow is the Śakti and the static is the Śivā. The potential energy is the Śivā; the
kinetic energy is the Śakti. Kinetic energy is compared to the snake the kuṇḍalinī Śakti which moves in
a snakelike motion.
The twelve kalās of the sun are coming from the embrace of the Śivā and the Śakti. Remember that it is
the light of the sun which is reflected by the moon and then to us. They are not separate. The flow of
kuṇḍalinī is maximum when the sun, moon and earth are in alignment. When the gravitational pull is
very strong or very weak then the kuṇḍalinī is very active. On earth during the eclipse time the tidal
waves rise. The oceans are trying to move away from the earth which represents on the cosmic scale
the liquid state trying to move away from the solid state, which is the upward motion of the kuṇḍalinī.
In relation to the cosmic force you should align your rituals also. That is why pūrṇimā (full moon) and
amāvāsyā (new moon) when the three orbs are approximately in alignment are supposed to be very
ideal for pūjā. That is why the moon's cycles are so closely related to the ritual cycles also. There is a
full moon ritual, a new moon ritual, etc. When you are in tune with the cosmic forces then your own
forces work much better.
In the embrace of Śivā and Śakti you find a pair of letters - kam bham, kham bam, etc. You use this key
to locate them on your body. There is a ray of light going from one point to the other point (see
diagram in section 4.22). The first two come from the right portion of the svādhiṣṭhāna cakra. From
this point onwards the points move up to the maṇipūra cakra and go around the waist, while the other
points move around the anāhatā cakra and the heart center. This is the embrace. Out of this embrace
comes the life-giving force of the world, the sun. The nuclear reactor that is there comes from this
embrace. You can see the left hand going around the waist and the right hand going around the chest
like this. We invoke the kalās of the sun from this embrace. The Sanskrit letters can all be replaced
with any language alphabets. It is the meanings that are important which are given there in the pūjā
for the sun's rays.
10.16 Amṛta Kalāvāhana
The right foot of Ardhanārīśvara is Śivā’s and the left foot is Śakti’s. If the Guru is male Her right foot
belongs to him and if the Guru is female Her left foot belongs to her. Time is liṅga of Śivā flowing into
space which is Devī’s yonī. This eternal union creates the flow of amṛta that is jñāna, the flow of the
Śivāgaṅgā between their feet becomes the flow of past and future through present, these form
amṛtakalās. The jñāna, the knowledge of the world comes to us through the pañcāmṛtas – śabda,
sparśa, rūpa, rasa and gandha.
10.17 The 64 intimate offerings
A brief explanation of the different traditions in the Śrī Vidyā must be given here first, the samayācāra,
dakṣiṇacāra, kaulacāra and vāmācāra traditions. We belong to the first three modes of worship.
Samayācāra means an internal mode of worship and worship with the fire ritual. We do the homas, we
do the internal visualizations, whether the external pūjā articles are present or not we can visualize
them and do the entire pūjā. The samayācāra traditions come to us from the Divya Paramparā that is
through Bālājī Bālātripurasundarī who is our guru.
From the Siddha Paramparā, from Sarasvatī I have been given the medhā Dakṣiṇāmūrti. So the
Dakṣiṇacāra sampradāya has been given to us through the Sarasvatī order. I am eligible for that and
those who have taken dīkṣā (initiation) from me are also eligible for that. Here you worship the Śrī
Cakra. It is a bahiḥ pūjā. You are worshipping something outside of you, usually a vigraham (an idol
or yantrā). However, the suvāsinī pūjā is also done. Suvāsinī is a woman who represents the Śakti, but
the pūjā is done only to her feet.
In the Kaulacāra tradition the idol is replaced by a living woman or a man or a couple. You can also
think of Her as the union of Śivā and Śakti. You can worship Her as a woman, as a man or as both.
There is no restriction. When we give Her a bath we not only chant the Durgā and Lakṣmī sūktams, but
we also chant the Puruṣa sūktam and the Rudram. The word "she" contains the word "he". So you do
not have to worry that you are only worshipping the mother goddess and you are ignoring the father
god. You are worshipping both. There is a Sanskrit saying that says whenever you worship all the gods
you worship keśava. Ka + īśa + va is Keśava. Ka is Brahma, īśa is Śivā and their union generates the
vam which is the amṛtam.
Bījam - that is the nature of Viṣṇu, the yonī. "Sarvadevam Namaskāram" goes to all the three gods,
Brahma, Viṣṇu and Śivā. The Kaulacāra traditions also come to us from the Siddha Yoga Paramparā.
From Bālājī I have been given Dīkṣā and from Sarasvatī I have been given the Dakṣiṇāmūrti tradition.
But the Kaulacāra traditions also come to us through the Dattātreya Sampradāya. Dattātreya is the
combination of Brahma, Viṣṇu and Rudra. He has given his instructions to his disciples: Prahlāda, his
first disciple, and Paraśurāma his second disciple. Paraśurāma had codified his instructions into a
Kalpa Sūtra. The Paraśurāma Kalpasūtra divides the Śrī Vidyā upāsana into five parts:
1. The first part is the Gaṇapati Upāsana Viddhi. It starts with the Mahā Gaṇapati mantra Ōm śrīm
hrīm klīm glaum gaṁ gaṇapatayē vara varada sarva janammē vaśamānaya svāhā. How to
worship Gaṇapati at athe Mūlādhārā cakra is given.
2. Then the Paraśurāmā Kalpa Sūtra goes on to describe the Śrī Kramam the Lalitā Kramam and
Navāvaraṇa Pūjās which is worshipping Lalitā at the Svādhiṣṭhāna Cakra.
3. Then it goes onto describe the Rāja-Śyāmala Upāsana Viddhi. She is called mantriṇī. As Rāja-
Śyāmala she plays the vīṇā and worshipped at the heart center, the music of life.
4. She is Vārāhī at the Viśuddhi. As Daṇḍinī, the one who can manifest, change, multiply she is
located at the Ājñā Center.
5. In the fifth part Paraśurāma has given the single letter mantra Sauḥ. That is called Para. So these
five mantras, Gaṇapati, Lalitā, Rāja-Śyāmala, Vārāhī and Sauḥ (Para) completes the Dattātreya
Upāsana paṭhati codified by Paraśurāma.
Paraśurāma has given māla mantras which are a series of rays emminating from the feet of the Divine
Mother which can be recited every day. We are told which mantra is located in which center. Then he
talks about how to do the Homas, the Fire Rituals to attain what you want in life. These are the
subjects covered in the Paraśurāma Kalpa Sūtra. We follow these procedures. This Sanskrit version is
a word-by-word translation of the Sanskrit text given by Paraśurāma. But if you see the Kalpa Sūtras
you will see it in an encoded form. They never write the mantras in a direct form. Every mantra has to
be deciphered before you can understand it. That has been done here. In this deciphering process there
is an Umānandanātha who has given a commentary and added several other things. Additionally, other
upàsakàs have written commentary further complicating it.
In the Kaulacāra tradition, the notion of self is completely absent. You see everyone as yourself. You
invoke the Goddess into your wife, or suvāsinī or anyone. You become the goddess in the virajā homa
and you are worshipping the goddess. There can be no sense of shame in that process. That is why
Dattātreya is known as digambara (naked). Dattātreya digambara is one of the great mantras of
Dattātreya. Shridi Sai Baba, Satya Sai Baba, Paramahāmsa Yogananda, Gaṇapati Sacchidananda, all
these teachers come from the Dattātreya tradition.
The last ācāra is called the Vāmācāra tradition. So far these ācāras are based on the worship of the
protective, nourishing, healing kind of aspects of the Divine. Then there are the terrible aspects of the
Divine which is the laya pradāna. That is the worship in the Vāmācāra tradition. There you think of
God as the terrible aspects. You go to the cremation grounds. There you have vairāgya, complete
detachment. Your energy goes from the viśuddhi cakra and goes up. It never comes down. You are
always working with the command center. It is difficult to arrive at those centers without passing
through the lower centers. Until you have experienced the heart center, to come to the ājñā center is
very dangerous because you will experience an inordinate amount of fears and you cannot get rid of
them. You cannot be given the astra vidyās, the atom bombs. You don't want to put the atom bombs in
the hands of crazy people. So the vāmācāra path is very dangerous without a proper guru. The aghorīs
are vāmācāra. Some vāmācāras do use their energies for healing. One we know in Benares uses his
healing energy to cure the lepers and the untouchables. Normally we like to think of God in the
beautiful. But with the vāmācāras, they like to think of God in the ugly.
10.18 Nityā Devatās Pūjā
In the Śrī Cakra Pūjā we also worship the Nityā Devatās around the central triangle, along with all
the Sanskrit vowels. The word Nityā in Sanskrit means a unit of time. The Nityās are the different
aspects of time. Unmoving time is kāla. Kāli is the power which creates the illusion of movement in it,
slicing it. The slice is called (tithi) Nityā if it is a digit of moon. Time in motion is kāli. Nityās are slots
of time in motion, like phases of the moon. They are visualized being around the Devī's neck. You start
with amāvāsyā, the new moon and go to paurṇamī, the full moon. You move around the central triangle
in an anticlockwise direction. But if you do the worship to the Devī, you move around her neck in a
clockwise direction. In the Śrī Cakra Pūjā the worship is usually confined to the recitation of the mūla
mantra of the nityā devatāḥ and sometimes a short pūjā to each of them.
The mūla mantras are all channels of energy and not very translatable. With each mantra you first
recite one vowel. These are to help you to memorize the whole thing to be able to do it internally. You
tend to forget where you are. The letters provide continuity to the next mantra. You remember the
beginning and the last vowel and they link to the next one. They are also pointers to where your
awareness is to be located around the viśuddhi cakra. The nityā devatās are also identified with the
fifteen syllabled mantra, the Pañcadaśī. Each syllable of the Pañcadaśī mantra is recited on its
associated day or nityā. The syllables of the mantra refer to the eternal, formless aspects of the
cosmos (Śivā) or the material universe and its māyā (Śakti). It is considered appropriate to do the
worship of the Devī on the days associated with the Śakti and not on days associated with Śivā.
The Tithis or Nityās
1st day ka associated with Śivā not good for pūjā
2nd day ē associated with Śakti good
3rd day ī associated with Śakti good
4th day la associated with Śakti good
5th day hrīm associated with with Śivā and excellent for pūjā
Śakti
6th day ha associated with Śivā not good
7th day sa associated with Śakti good
8th day ka associated with Śivā not good
9th day ha associated with Śivā not good
10th day la associated with Śakti good
11th day hrīm associated with Śivā and Śakti excellent (“ekādaśī")
12th day sa associated with Śakti good
13th day ka associated with Śivā not good
14th day la associated with Śakti good
15th day hrīm associated with Śivā and Śakti excellent (Pūrṇimā full moon
day)
The same thing relates to the waning of the moon until you reach New Moon or amāvāsyā which is
considered very good for pūjā. In addition to this association of the Nityās to the Pañcadaśī mantra, in
a tantric pūjā, each of the Nityā Devatās is associated to a point on the body of the Devī. Worshipping
the Devī on these points everyday would excite her and cause orgasm.
The important diagram given above shows the kāla sthānas (locations in body) according to
Nityāṣoḍaśkārṇava, a part of Umā Māheśvara Tantra. Notice that in both dark and bright halves of the
months, the locations are going down from head to toes but in female (left) and male (right) parts of
bodies.
It is said that (Ādi) Śaṅkarācārya, challenged by Ubhaya Bharati, Maṇḍana Miśra’s wife in Kashmir,
learned the spots where a woman easily gets an orgasm by touching the spot corresponding to the Tithi
Nityā. He learned this by doing parakāyapraveśanam into a king’s body by learning the 64 arts of
making love from the hundred king’s wives.
10.19 Guru Maṇḍala Pūjā
The divyaugha guru (our heavenly gurus, the Divine Flow) comes from Bālātripurasundarī, (or Lord
Veṅkaṭēśvara, Bālājī they are the same), and Sanatkumāra. Bālātripurasundarī is depicted as a young
girl, from around three years old up to nine years old. Sanatkumāra was a famous sage who was an
ascetic. The mantra of Bālātripurasundarī can be said in three ways:
aim klīm sauḥ - Bālājī is three years old; aim klīm sauḥ, sauḥ klīm aim - she is six years old; and
aim klīm sauḥ, sauḥ klīm aim, aim klīm sauḥ she is nine years old. She is my guru. It was She who
demanded that the Śrī Meru temple be built and got it done.
The next guru worshipped is the Siddhaugha guru, Dattātreya. My guru comes from the Dattātreya
avadhūta tradition, Śrī avadhūta Svaprakāśānanda of Anakapalli. He follows the Dattātreya tradition.
I get what tradition he has got. Dattātreya is Siddhaugha. He is supposed to be living today. His feet
are in the vindhyā mountains at Ginnath. If you go there it is possible that you may have his darshan.
You have got to climb about 10,000 steps. All that you find there is one little block with two feet there
which are worshipped every day. The manaugha guru, the human form is Svaprakāśānanda tīrtha
paramahāmsa avadhūta.
The Khaḍga Māla Stotram is the Devī's praise which lists the powers of Devī. It can be recited in five
different ways. Śuddha śakti māla means you are not adding any ending, you are just being the power
yourself (not seeing any difference); Namo anta māla, you are adding namaḥ at the end (seeing a
difference, but knowing that you are not different from the power); Jaya anta māla means you are
saying Jaya (victory to) at the end; Swaha antha Māla means you are saying Svāhā and offering ghee
into the fire; and Tarpanta Māla means you say tarpayāmi and offering water of your life in the cause
of the power.
You can think of Devī as a male, a female, or a loving couple in union. These three ways of thinking
can be combined with the above five ways of endings to make 5x3 =15 ways of worship. Such ways of
worship are an integral part of worship of Devī. They are the meanings of letters in the Pañcadaśī
Mantra. In each of the 15 days of the lunar calendar you are supposed to worship in these 15 different
ways associated with that day. This is called Tithi Nitya Pūjā Vidhi. There are fifteen ways in which the
Khaḍga Māla can be worshipped.
On what days Devī is worshipped in a male (liṅgam), a female (yonī) or as the union of the male (seer)
and female (seen) is to be found in the Pañcadaśī Mantra, as given below.
In the Pañcadaśī Mantra of Devī called the kāḍi vidyā, there are three "ka"s and the two "ha"s which
represent the male. The mantra is also the sequence of the days of lunar calendar; the first letter is the
first day, the second letter the second day and so on. Śivā is supposed to be the destroyer; so the days
on which we worship Devī as male Śivā is considered inauspicious for materialistic gains (but
auspicious for spiritual gains). The seed letters "ē, ī one la, two sa" are the days on which we worship
Devī as a female (yonī=mother=source). These days are obviously auspicious, for she is taking care of
our material needs. However, the very best days are those in which Devī in the form of a couple in
union; these days correspond to the second and third la, and the three hrīms.
On lunar days 1,6,8,9,13 Devī is worshipped in a Male; on days 2,3,4,7,12 Devī is worshipped in a
female, and on days 5,10,11,14,15 in a couple. It is our normal understanding that Devī is the mother
who the gives us life, nourishes us through her milk and gives us knowledge. Hrīm is the union of the
male and female which gives us life. So firstly, it the best to worship Her as male and female in union,
to get all forms of creativity invoked into us. Worship of genitals therefore gives us Kriyā Śakti (called
Pārvatī or Durgā or simply Ma), to manifest all kinds of creative powers in real life. Second best is to
worship Her as the female only that gives us nourishment (meditation on breasts gives that) and the
last is to worship Her as a male which helps us to detach ourselves from this world. All this
information is coded into the mantra the Pañcadaśī Mantra.
10.21 Khaḍga Māla Stotra
The most important thing that you have to remember here is the sequence in which these deities are
located. When you do the circumambulation to the Śrī Cakra you have to visit each of these deities in
this order. This makes it complicated and you have to keep your wits about you. The Khaḍga Māla
Stotra defines the sequence and you have to remember and visualize the placement of the Goddess. You
have to be so familiar with the process that you can close your eyes and visualize the form of the
goddess in your mind. It is a very powerful meditative technique for visualizing the different forms of
the Goddesses. Once you are familiar with the name and are able to associate with the form of the
Goddess, it is then that the pūjā is complete. They should be as if they were living right in front of you,
waving their various weapons.
In the second square enclosure we have got the Eight passions. They are the potential distractions to
our sādhanā. The passions are located on the left-hand side the entrances. They are:
1. Brāhmiis lust;
2. Māhēśvarī is anger;
3. Kaumārī is possessiveness;
4. Vaiṣṇavī is delusion;
5. Vārāhī is pride;
6. Māhēndrī is jealousy;
7. Cāmuṇda is virtue. She lives in the cremation grounds. She brings vairāgya, detachment which is
supposed to be auspicious;
8. Mahālakṣmī is sin. She is the giver of Gold. When you think of Her, you think of all the mundane
things that distract you too much and keep you attached.
The third enclosure the Mudrā Śaktis: In the third enclosure we have the Mudrā Śaktis. They
represent the procedures to control the passions above and obtain the powers mentioned in the first
enclosure. Kṣōbhiṇī means intercourse.
1. Sarva Samkṣōbhiṇī means having intercourse with everyone and everything, or agitating
everything;
2. Sarva Vidrāviṇī making things flow, liquefying all;
3. Sarvākarṣiṇī attracting all;
4. Sarva Vaśamkarī keeping things under your control;
5. Sarvōnmādinī making all crazy;
6. Sarva Mahāṅkuśē tricking all and goading into action;
7. Sarva Kēcari able to move in all space;
8. Sarva Bījē all knowledge;
9. Sarva Yōnē the source, the womb of all;
10. Sarva Trikhaṇḍē all forms and states of awareness, being the knower, the knowing and the known.
The Sarva adjective makes these powers have a potency when applied to the Śaktis of passion. They
enable you to get over the passions, and they create the ten Siddhis, or attainments. Then, at the end of
each Āvaraṇa there is a paragraph which starts with the mantra for that āvaraṇa. These mantras are
listed at the beginning of the pūjā also. The first āvaraṇa mantra is am ām sauḥ.
The paragraph translated for the 1st Āvaraṇa follows. It will be the same for all the Āvaraṇas except
for the name of the yōginī (Prakaṭa Yōginī) and the cakra (Trilōkya mōhana cakre) and the controller
of the cakra (Tripurā Cakreśvarī). These explicit yōginīs, whose nature is expressly visible, not
suppressed; whose cakra rules and deludes all the three worlds of waking, sleeping, dreaming; along
with their mudrās, hand gestures; along with their attainments; along with their weapons; along with
their powers; along with their vehicles; along with their retinues of attendants; by all the intimate
services; well worshipped; well satisfied; very happy or pleased; may all these gods be so.
Again am ām sauḥ comes. Tripurā Cakreśvarī is the name of the controller of this cakra. In the Khaḍga
Māla Stotra all the names of Tripurā come together at the end. Here in the Navāvaraṇa Pūjā each of
Her names comes at this place at the end of the āvaraṇa. So in the 2nd āvaraṇa her name is Tripurēśi;
in the 3rd it is Tripurasundarī, etc.
Then you say Śrī Pādukām pūjayāmi tarpayāmi namaḥ to your lotus feet I offer pūjā and tarpaṇam
(water offering). I also offer gandham - sandal, puṣpam - flowers, dhūpam - incense, dīpam - lights,
and naivēdyam - food offerings. You show the first hand mudrā of Sarva Samkṣōbhiṇī Drām. After
each āvaraṇa you show one of the ten hand mudrās. They go in order from Drām to Yonī mudrās.
The 2nd Āvaraṇa
These are the Sixteen Attracting Powers which are also associated with the Nityā Devīs, the 16 Digits
or Phases of the Moon. You worship the Devī's hips and girdle.
The names of the Devīs given are:
The mantra for the 2nd āvaraṇa is Aim Klīm Sauḥ. The yōginī is Gupta yōginyaḥ the secret yōginī.
The cakra is Sarvāśā paripūraka cakre the wheel which fulfills all directions and all desires. The
Controller of this cakra is Tripurēśi the controller of the waking, dreaming and sleeping states. You
offer the Sarva Vidrāviṇī Drīm mudrā.
3rd Āvaraṇa
The Eight Erotic Sentiments. You worship the Devī at the Svādhiṣṭhāna Cakra. The names of the Devīs
given are:
The mantra is Hrīm Klīm Sauḥ. The yōginī is Guptatara yōginyaḥ the esoteric yōginī; the cakra is
Sarva Samkṣōbhaṇa Cakre the cakra which agitates everyone; the Controller of the cakra is
Tripurasundarī the Beautiful one who lives in all three states of consciousness. You offer the mudrā
Sarvākarṣiṇī Klīm.
4th Āvaraṇa
The Fourteen Worlds. You worship the Devī at the Mūlādhārā Cakra. The names of the Fourteen
worlds that follow are not listed in the pūjā, but represented by the āvaraṇa. Seven are above our
world; seven below us.
Below: 1. atala 2. vitala 3. sutala 4. talātala 5. rasātala 6. pātāla 7. himatala
Above: 1. bhūḥ 2. bhuvaḥ 3. suvaḥ 4. mahaha 5. janaha 6. tapaha 7. satyam.
The names of the 4th āvaraṇa are:
The mantra is Haim Hklīm Hsauḥ. She is Sampradāya yōginyaḥ the traditional yōginī. The cakra is
Sarva Saubhāgyadāyaka Cakre the cakra of all kinds of union. The Controller is Tripura Vaśinī the
one who lives in all three states of consciousness. You offer Sarva Vaśamkarī mudrā Blūm.
5th Āvaraṇa
The Pañcabhūtas. The outer ten triangles of the Śrī Cakra. You worship the Devī at the Maṇipūra
Cakra. Five sensory and five motor organs - Five elements and their five tanmātras (properties).
The names are:
The mantra is Hsaim Hsklīm Hsauḥ. She is Kulōttīrṇa Yōginyaḥ the yōginī who goes beyond all
classifications. The cakra is Sarvārtha Sādhaka cakre the wheel that propels you onto the right path,
gives you all wealth, fulfills all desires and makes liberation possible. The Controller is Tripura śrī
cakreśvarī the one who is the riches of the three states. You offer Sarvōnmādinī mudrā Saḥ.
6th Āvaraṇa
Five elements and their five properties - The ten airs moving in the life (prāṇa-apāna-vyāna- udāna-
samāna, nāga-kūrma- kṛkara-devadattaḥ-dhanañjaya). The inner 10 triangles of the Śrī Cakra. You
worship the Devī at the Anāhatā Cakra.
The names are
The mantra is Hrīm Klīm Blēm. The yōginī is Nigarbha Yōginyaḥ the yōginī protecting the child in
the womb. The cakra is Sarva Rakṣākara Cakre the wheel of all protection. The Controller of the
cakra is Tripura Mālini the sequences of these states experienced by all people. You offer Sarva
Mahāṅkuśē mudrā Krōm.
7th Āvaraṇa
The Eight Forms of Sarasvatī. You worship the Devī at the Viśuddhi cakra. The eight forms of
Sarasvatī are the eight groups of Sanskrit letters describing the explosion of the cosmos from the point
(bindu).
The mantra for the 7th āvaraṇa is Hrīm Śrīm Sauḥ. The yōginī is Rahasya yōginyaḥ the secret yōginī.
The cakra is Sarvarōgahara cakre the wheel which eliminates disease. The Controller of the cakra is
Tripura Siddha Cakreśvarī the achievements possible in all these three states. You offer the Sarva
Kēcari mudrā Hskphrēm.
8th Āvaraṇa
The Weapons of the Divine Mother and the Goddesses of the Inner Triangle. You worship the Devī's
arms and hands and then her third eye, the Ājñā Cakra.
drām drīm klīm blūm saḥ sarva jṛmbhaṇēbhyō kāmēśvarī kāmeśvara bānēbhyō namaḥ. Śrī
Banaśakti the five flowery arrows of mānmatha call the five senses; sound (music), touch (eros), form
(beauty), taste (sweetness), smell (fragrance).
ṭham ḍham, sarva sammōhanābhyām kāmēśvarī kāmeśvara dhanurbhyām namaḥ. Śrī
Dhanuśakti the sugar cane bow representing the mind which likes sweet things in life.
hrīm ām, sarva vaśīkaraṇābhyām kāmēśvarī kāmeśvara pāśābhyām namaḥ. Śrī Pasaśakti -
Paraśakti’s bewitching powers of love.
krōm kröm, sarva sthambhaṇābhyām kāmēśvarī kāmeśvara aṅkuśābhyām namaḥ. Śrī
Ankusaśakti the repulsive power to control evil.
1. ka ē ī la hrīm vama rajoguṇa icchā śakti Mahā Kāmēśvaryai namaḥ. Śrī Icchā śakti desire, the
thrust of God, desiring to see himself in many forms.
2. ha sa ka la hrīm jyeṣṭha sattva guṇa jñāna śakti Mahā Vajrēśvaryai namaḥ. Śrī jñāna śakti
knowledge the ability to obtain the cosmos in a seed form.
3. sa ka la hrīm raudrī tamoguṇa kriyāśakti Mahā Bhagamālinyai namaḥ. Śrī Kriyā śakti action the
ability to express the cosmos out of the seed.
ka ē ī la hrīm, ha sa ka ha la hrīm, sa ka la hrīm icchā jñāna kriyā śakti Mahā devī all of the above.
The mantra is Hsraim Hsrklīm Hsrsauḥ. The yōginī is Atirahasya yōginyaḥ the most secret yōginī.
The cakra is Sarva Siddhiprada cakre the wheel of realizations. The Controller of the cakra is
Tripurāmba Cakreśvarī the experience of the cosmos in Her three states unifying all the experiences
of all life. You offer the Sarva Bīja mudrā Hsaum.
9th Āvaraṇa
Sri Lalitā Devī united with Sadāśiva in the Bindu. You worship the Devī at the Sahasrāra Cakra. We
worship Śrī Śrī Lalitāmbika Śrī Sahasrakṣi Śrī Rajarājeśvari, whose mantra is ka ē ī la hrīm, ha sa
ka ha la hrīm, sa ka la hrīm. She is Ati Rahasya yōginī the most transcendental secret yōginī.
The 9th cakra is Sarvānanda Maya cakre the wheel of bliss. The Controller is Śrī Mahā Cakreśvarī
the Great Cosmic Controller. We worship Her with the Sarva Yonī mudrā Aim.
10.22 Naivēdyam mantrā – for reference
amṛtamastu |amṛtāpidhānamasi|
uttarāpōṣaṇam kalpayāmi | hastau prakṣālayāmi | pādau prakṣālayāmi |
gaṇdūṣamācamanīyam ca kalpayāmi namaḥ ||
10.23 Naivēdyam mudrās – for reference
1. Prāṇa 2. Apāna
3. Vyāna 4. Udāna
5. Samāna 6. Brahmaṇē
10.24 Dīpa mudrās – for reference
1. Cakra mudrā (wheel) 2. śaṅku mudrā (conch) 3. Padma mudrā (lotus flower)
– Srīm – Hrīm – Klum