Mṛtyuñjaya/Amṛteśvara Upāsanā: Three-Syllable Mantra, Kavaca, Japa-Phala, and Pūjā-Aṅgas
जपेदष्टसहस्रं वै त्रिसन्ध्यं मासमेकतः / जरामृत्युमहाव्याधिशत्रुच्छिवशान्तिदम्
japedaṣṭasahasraṃ vai trisandhyaṃ māsamekataḥ / jarāmṛtyumahāvyādhiśatrucchivaśāntidam
ত্রিসন্ধ্যায় এক মাস অবিরত আট সহস্র জপ কর; তা জরা, মৃত্যু, মহারোগ ও শত্রু নাশ করে মঙ্গলশান্তি দান করে।
Lord Vishnu (addressing Garuda/Vinata-putra)
Concept: Mantra-japa performed with strict regimen yields protective and pacifying results, mitigating afflictions and hostility.
Vedantic Theme: Upāsanā as karma-yoga auxiliary: repeated mantra purifies mind and reduces kleśas; ‘śānti’ as fruit of sattva increase.
Application: Adopt a 30-day vrata: 8000 japa per day divided across three sandhyās; track counts, maintain purity of speech/diet, and dedicate results for peace and health.
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: bhayanaka
Related Themes: Garuda Purana 1.18.5-6 (dhyāna prerequisites); Garuda Purana 1.18.8-9 (pūjā-upacāra sequence)
This verse presents trisandhya japa as a disciplined, time-bound sādhana (one month) that brings śānti and protective results—countering disease, hostility, and fear of mortality.
By prescribing japa as a preventive spiritual remedy, it frames suffering (vyādhi, mṛtyu-bhaya, enemies) as conditions that can be mitigated through sustained dharmic practice and inner purification.
Establish a consistent daily spiritual routine at dawn/noon/dusk (prayer, mantra repetition, mindfulness), sustained over a fixed period, as a disciplined way to cultivate steadiness, resilience, and peace.