The Birth and Consecration of Skanda (Kartikeya) at Kurukshetra
इत्येवमुक्त्वा भगवान् शूलपाणिः पितामहम् सस्मार दैवतैः सार्द्ध ते ऽप्याजग्मुस्त्वरान्विताः
ityevamuktvā bhagavān śūlapāṇiḥ pitāmaham sasmāra daivataiḥ sārddha te 'pyājagmustvarānvitāḥ
Thus having spoken, the Blessed Lord, the trident-bearer (Śiva), called to mind Pitāmaha (Brahmā) together with the gods; and they too arrived swiftly, without delay.
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‘Pitāmaha’ (“grandfather”) is a standard Purāṇic epithet for Brahmā, reflecting his role as progenitor of beings and patriarchal source of lineages in creation narratives.
In Purāṇic idiom, divine remembrance functions as efficacious will: a deity’s thought can serve as invocation, command, or immediate communication, indicating non-physical modes of action beyond ordinary speech or travel.
It signals escalation toward coordinated divine action: Śiva convenes Brahmā and the devas, a typical prelude to strategizing or witnessing key events (such as the emergence of Skanda or preparations for battle).