The Caturmasya Observances and the Rite of Vishnu’s Sleep (Aśūnya-Śayana) and Shiva’s Monthly Vows
तत्र स्नायीन वै विद्वान् गोमूत्रेण जलेन च स्नातः संपूजयेत् पुष्पैर्धत्तूरस्य त्रिलोचनम्
tatra snāyīna vai vidvān gomūtreṇa jalena ca snātaḥ saṃpūjayet puṣpairdhattūrasya trilocanam
Dort soll ein Gelehrter, nachdem er sich mit Kuhurin und mit Wasser gebadet hat, nach dem Bad Trilocana (den Dreiaugigen Herrn) ordnungsgemäß mit Dhattūra-Blüten verehren.
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Ritual purity and disciplined devotion are presented as supports for worship: the practitioner purifies body and intent (snāna) and then offers simple, prescribed items with reverence, emphasizing inner resolve expressed through outer correctness.
This is not sarga/pratisarga/vaṃśa material; it aligns best with ancillary Purāṇic instruction—tīrtha-māhātmya and vrata-vidhi—often embedded within Purāṇas alongside the pañcalakṣaṇa topics.
Trilocana signifies omniscience and the witnessing of the three times (past/present/future). Dhattūra, a potent and liminal plant associated with Śiva, symbolizes offering of what is intense/transformative—devotion that can transmute impurities into grace when properly directed.