मन्त्रसिद्ध्यर्थं गुरुपूजा–आज्ञा–पौरश्चर्यविधिः / Guru-Authorization, Offerings, and Puraścaraṇa for Mantra-Siddhi
जिह्वामात्रपरिस्पंदादीषदुच्चारितो ऽपि वा । अपरैरश्रुतः किंचिच्छ्रुतो वोपांशुरुच्यते । धिया यदक्षरश्रेण्या वर्णाद्वर्णं पदात्पदम् । शब्दार्थचिंतनं भूयः कथ्यते मानसो जपः
jihvāmātraparispaṃdādīṣaduccārito 'pi vā | aparairaśrutaḥ kiṃcicchruto vopāṃśurucyate | dhiyā yadakṣaraśreṇyā varṇādvarṇaṃ padātpadam | śabdārthaciṃtanaṃ bhūyaḥ kathyate mānaso japaḥ
That japa which is uttered only slightly—by the mere movement of the tongue—so that it is not heard by others and is only faintly heard by oneself, is called upāṃśu (murmured japa). But when, in the mind, one follows the sequence of syllables—letter by letter and word by word—again and again, contemplating both the sound and its meaning, that is declared to be mānasa japa (mental repetition).
Suta Goswami
Tattva Level: pashu
Shiva Form: Dakṣiṇāmūrti
Significance: Establishes inner discipline for mantra-japa; supports purification (śuddhi) and readiness for Śiva-anugraha.
Role: teaching
It defines subtler and more inward forms of mantra repetition—upāṃśu and mānasa—showing that japa becomes spiritually deeper as it moves from outer sound to inner contemplation of both the mantra’s vibration and meaning, leading the devotee toward Shiva-realization.
In Linga-worship and Saguna devotion, japa supports pūjā by steadying attention on Shiva’s presence; mānasa japa especially internalizes the worship so that the Linga is honored outwardly while Shiva is remembered inwardly with meaning-filled awareness.
Practice upāṃśu japa by softly moving the tongue so others cannot hear, and progress to mānasa japa by repeating the mantra mentally—syllable by syllable—while contemplating its meaning; this is ideal alongside Rudrākṣa counting and daily Shiva-pūjā or Mahāśivarātri vrata.