कैलासप्रस्तरो नाम मण्डलम्परिभाषितम् । अर्चयेन्नित्यमेवैतत्पक्षे वा मासिमासि वा
kailāsaprastaro nāma maṇḍalamparibhāṣitam | arcayennityamevaitatpakṣe vā māsimāsi vā
A sacred maṇḍala is prescribed, known as the “Kailāsa-prastara.” One should worship it regularly—either every day, or at least once each fortnight, or month after month.
Suta Goswami (narrating the prescribed worship as taught in the Kailāsa-saṃhitā tradition)
Tattva Level: pasha
Shiva Form: Mahādeva
Sthala Purana: Not a specific jyotirliṅga-sthala; ‘Kailāsa-prastara’ is a prescribed maṇḍala/altar pattern evoking Kailāsa as Śiva’s cosmic abode, used to stabilize daily/periodic worship.
Significance: Merit accrues through regularity (nitya/naimittika) and maintaining continuity of Śiva-sambandha; the maṇḍala functions as a portable ‘Kailāsa’ for the householder/ritualist.
Role: nurturing
Offering: pushpa
It emphasizes niyama (regular discipline) in Shiva-upāsanā: steady, repeated worship purifies the paśu (bound soul) and turns the mind toward Pati (Śiva), supporting liberation through devotion and right practice.
The “Kailāsa-prastara” maṇḍala functions as a sacred support for Saguna worship—an ordered ritual space where Śiva is approached through arcana, similar in intent to Liṅga-pūjā that stabilizes attention and devotion.
Perform regular arcana to Śiva using a prescribed maṇḍala—ideally daily; otherwise observe a consistent schedule (fortnightly or monthly), maintaining purity, mantra-japa, and focused worship.