Kālajñāna (Knowledge of Time) and Mṛtyu-cihna (Signs of Death): Śiva’s Instruction to Umā
कनिष्ठामादितः कृत्वा यावदंगुष्ठकं प्रिये । पर्वत्रयक्रमेणैव हस्तयोरुभयोरपि
kaniṣṭhāmāditaḥ kṛtvā yāvadaṃguṣṭhakaṃ priye | parvatrayakrameṇaiva hastayorubhayorapi
O Geliebte, beginnend beim kleinen Finger und fortschreitend bis zum Daumen, soll man in der Folge der drei Gelenke zählen und dies an beiden Händen gleichermaßen tun.
Lord Shiva (instructing Parvati)
Tattva Level: pati
Shiva Form: Dakṣiṇāmūrti
Sthala Purana: This is a direct upadeśa scene (Śiva teaching Pārvatī) rather than a site-māhātmya; it models guru-to-śiṣya transmission.
Shakti Form: Pārvatī
Role: teaching
It emphasizes disciplined, attentive japa—turning the body’s simple movements into a regulated sadhana so the mind becomes steady and devotion to Pati (Shiva) deepens, supporting liberation in the Shaiva Siddhanta spirit.
Japa is a core limb of Saguna Shiva worship (often alongside Linga puja); this verse gives a practical counting method so the devotee can sustain mantra repetition with concentration, offering the mind repeatedly to Shiva as the worshipful Lord.
A finger-joint counting method for mantra japa: start from the little finger and proceed to the thumb, counting through the three joints, using both hands—useful for steady repetition of the Panchakshara (e.g., “Om Namaḥ Śivāya”).