Dhyāna of Hari and the Procedure of Āditya/Sūrya Worship
ॐ खखोल्काय त्रिदशाय नमः / ॐ विचि ठठ शिरसे नमः / ॐ ज्ञानिने ठठ शिखायै नमः / ॐ सहस्ररश्मये ठठ कवचाय नमः
oṃ khakholkāya tridaśāya namaḥ / oṃ vici ṭhaṭha śirase namaḥ / oṃ jñānine ṭhaṭha śikhāyai namaḥ / oṃ sahasraraśmaye ṭhaṭha kavacāya namaḥ
Om—salutaciones a Khakholka, el divino entre los Treinta (dioses). Om—(con las sílabas semilla «vici ṭhaṭha») salutaciones a la Cabeza. Om—salutaciones al Conocedor; (con «ṭhaṭha») a la Śikhā, el mechón de la coronilla. Om—salutaciones al de los Mil Rayos; (con «ṭhaṭha») al Kavaca, la armadura protectora.
Lord Vishnu (teaching Garuda/Vinata-putra, in a mantra-ritual context)
Concept: Mantra-aṅga nyāsa: invoking Sūrya’s aspects (tridaśa, jñānin, sahasra-raśmi) to sanctify and protect the practitioner.
Vedantic Theme: Devatā-upāsanā as internalization: the cosmic principle is contemplated as present within the embodied locus, aiding purification and steadiness.
Application: Perform nyāsa with attention and ethical restraint; treat ‘protection’ as support for dharmic living and focused sādhanā, not aggression.
Primary Rasa: adbhuta
Secondary Rasa: vira
Type: ritualized body (microcosm)
Related Themes: Garuda Purana 1.16.12 (astramantra and jvālajvāl formula completing the protective sequence)
This verse functions like a protective nyāsa: specific mantra-syllables are placed on the head, śikhā, and as a ‘kavaca’ to establish ritual protection and steadiness of mind during worship.
Indirectly: it emphasizes spiritual safeguarding through mantra-discipline. In Garuda Purana’s broader teaching, such protective rites support purity and preparedness for higher states, complementing ethical living and death-related rites.
Use it as a reminder that spiritual practice includes both knowledge (jñāna) and protective discipline (kavaca/nyāsa): cultivate clarity, restraint, and a consistent daily practice before undertaking major rituals.