Devapūjā-krama: Ārghya-saṃskāra, Maṇḍala–Nyāsa, Mudrā-pradarśana, Āvaraṇa-arcana, Homa, Japa, and Kṣamāpaṇa
सुषुम्णावर्त्मना पुष्पमाघ्रायोद्वासयेद् बुधः । शंखचक्रशिलालिंगविघ्नसूर्यद्वयं तथा ॥ १२० ॥
suṣumṇāvartmanā puṣpamāghrāyodvāsayed budhaḥ | śaṃkhacakraśilāliṃgavighnasūryadvayaṃ tathā || 120 ||
على الحكيم أن يستنشق عِطر الزهرة عبر مسار السوشومنَا (suṣumṇā)، ثم يزفر برفق. وعلى النحو نفسه يتأمّل: الصدفة المقدّسة (شَنْخا)، والقرص (تشَكرا)، والحجر المقدّس (شِلا)، واللينغا، ومزيل العوائق (فيغْنا/غانيشا)، وزوج الشمسين.
Sanatkumara (teaching Narada in a technical/ritual-yogic register)
Vrata: none
Primary Rasa: adbhuta
Secondary Rasa: shanta
It links inner yogic practice (directing breath through the suṣumṇā) with outer sacred symbols, teaching that disciplined prāṇa and focused contemplation together stabilize worship and concentration.
By naming devotional emblems—especially śaṅkha and cakra associated with Viṣṇu—it frames breath-control and mental recollection as supports for steady upāsanā, making devotion more one-pointed and embodied.
A technical procedure combining regulated inhalation/exhalation with dhyāna on specific ritual icons—typical of the Narada Purana’s Book 1.3 emphasis on applied disciplines and methodical practice.