Śivapūjā-vidhi: Purifications, Sūrya–Graha Mantras, Nyāsa, and Bhūtaśuddhi leading to Śivoham-bhāva
रुद्रहेतुस्त्रिरुद्धातास्त्रिगुणा रक्तवर्णकम् / ज्वालाकृते त्रिकोणं च चतुः कोटिशतानि च
rudrahetustriruddhātāstriguṇā raktavarṇakam / jvālākṛte trikoṇaṃ ca catuḥ koṭiśatāni ca
ই ৰুদ্ৰ-হেতুজাত, ত্ৰিবিধ নিয়ন্ত্রিত, ত্ৰিগুণাত্মক আৰু ৰক্তবৰ্ণ। জ্বালাৰ আকৃতিৰ ত্ৰিকোণ, আৰু ইয়াৰ প্ৰমাণ চাৰিশ কোটি।
Lord Vishnu (speaking to Garuda/Vinata-putra)
Concept: Transformative tejas (Rudra principle) is structured (triangular, three-guṇa) and restrained (triruddha) to serve purification rather than chaos.
Vedantic Theme: Sublimation of guṇas: using structured rajas/tejas as a ladder toward sattva and eventual transcendence; disciplined containment of power.
Application: In practice, visualize the red triangular flame as steady and bounded; if agitation arises, return to breath and cooling awareness—power is to be ‘restrained’ (ruddha) and made serviceable.
Primary Rasa: raudra
Secondary Rasa: adbhuta
Type: yogic mandala geometry
Related Themes: Garuda Purana 1.23.42-44 (mandala/lotus loci leading to this fiery triangular form)
This verse attributes a fearsome, fiery principle/form to Rudra, emphasizing that certain subtle-world phenomena are governed by divine cosmic forces rather than random chance.
By describing a guṇa-based, flame-like, structured realm/form with vast extent, it frames the post-death journey as passing through precisely ordered subtle realities shaped by cosmic laws (guṇas) and divine governance.
Cultivating sattva (clarity) through ethical living, restraint, and devotion helps reduce tamas/rajas-driven suffering in the after-death trajectory described in Garuda Purana.