Kriyā-yoga, the Virāṭ-Puruṣa Mapping, and the Sun-God’s Monthly Expansions
स्वमायां वनमालाख्यां नानागुणमयीं दधत् । वासश्छन्दोमयं पीतं ब्रह्मसूत्रं त्रिवृत् स्वरम् ॥ ११ ॥ बिभर्ति साङ्ख्यं योगं च देवो मकरकुण्डले । मौलिं पदं पारमेष्ठ्यं सर्वलोकाभयङ्करम् ॥ १२ ॥
sva-māyāṁ vana-mālākhyāṁ nānā-guṇa-mayīṁ dadhat vāsaś chando-mayaṁ pītaṁ brahma-sūtraṁ tri-vṛt svaram
The Lord wears His own māyā, woven of many qualities, as a flower garland. His yellow garment is the Vedic meters, and His sacred thread is the praṇava “Om” of three sounds. As shark-shaped (makara) earrings He bears the paths of Sāṅkhya and yoga, and His crown—granting fearlessness to all worlds—is the supreme station of Brahmaloka.
This verse explains that the Lord’s garland, clothing, thread, earrings, and crown are not ordinary decorations—they symbolically represent His māyā, the Vedic chandas, the threefold Vedic sound, the disciplines of Sāṅkhya and Yoga, and His supreme position that grants fearlessness to all beings.
Śukadeva presents Sāṅkhya (true analysis of reality) and Yoga (practical spiritual discipline) as inseparable from the Lord—like earrings worn on His body—showing these teachings ultimately belong to Him and lead the seeker toward Him.
It teaches to see spiritual meaning behind sacred symbols and to integrate both understanding (Sāṅkhya) and practice (Yoga) while taking shelter of the Lord’s supreme position, which is described as the source of fearlessness.