Mahāviṣṇu-Mantras: Aṣṭākṣarī, Sudarśana-Astra, Nyāsa Systems, Āvaraṇa-Pūjā, and Prayogas
स्तंभयद्वितयं भूयो मोहयद्वितय ततः । द्रावयद्वितयं तावदाकर्षययुगं ततः ॥ १५० ॥
staṃbhayadvitayaṃ bhūyo mohayadvitaya tataḥ | drāvayadvitayaṃ tāvadākarṣayayugaṃ tataḥ || 150 ||
ثم من جديد أقم ثنائيةَ أعمال التثبيت والإجماد؛ ثم أقم ثنائيةَ أعمال الإيهام والإضلال. وبعد ذلك أقم ثنائيةَ أعمال الإذابة والتليين؛ ثم من بعده أقم ثنائيةَ أعمال الجذب والاستدعاء.
Sanatkumara (teaching Narada in a technical/ritual-science context)
Vrata: none
Primary Rasa: vira
Secondary Rasa: raudra
It presents an ordered ritual methodology—progressing from restraint (stambhana) to confusion (mohana), then softening (drāvaṇa), and finally drawing-in (ākarṣaṇa)—showing how technical rites are applied step-by-step rather than randomly.
Indirectly: it highlights disciplined procedure and controlled application of powers, implying that higher aims (including devotion) require method, restraint, and right sequencing rather than impulsive practice.
A practical, procedural emphasis typical of technical disciplines—how a rite is sequenced and repeated—aligning with applied ritual science and the precision valued in Vedanga-style learning.